Path: news1.icaen!news.uiowa.edu!news.physics.uiowa.edu!math.ohio-state.edu!howland.erols.net!portc02.blue.aol.com!portc01.blue.aol.com!audrey01.news.aol.com!not-for-mail From: rubywand@aol.com Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 Subject: TransWarp GS users Beware Gold! (II Alive Fall issue correction) Date: 13 Nov 1996 07:59:18 GMT Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) (1.10) Lines: 59 Sender: news@aol.com Message-ID: <19961113080101.DAA17616@ladder01.news.aol.com> References: <3283c171.0@news.netVIP.com> NNTP-Posting-Host: ladder01.news.aol.com X-Newsreader: AOL Offline Reader Bill Shuff, author of the "Go for the Gold" piece in the Fall issue of II Alive emailed a note pointing out an important _editing_ error in the step for construction of the accelerator cable by TWGS users. The published piece says that ONE pair of leads must be slit and reversed and suggests that you use your original as a guide to pick the pair. This is NOT correct. Bill comments: >> ..... You rendered the discussion of the TWGS cable completely nonsensical, inaccurate and worthless to anyone wanting to build such a cable. The ribbon cable for the TWGS must be slit into 20 pairs of wires not into one pair and each pair of wires must be given a twist to reverse the wires. Since the original cable has NO twisted pairs of wires at all, there is no way anyone could examine their old cable as you suggested and see how to make the wire twists. Certainly, there is not one twisted pair of wires in either my cable or the original cable! I suspect that my statement that wires at one END of the cable must be silt into pairs, was interpreted as one EDGE by you and from there the description of my cable and the stock cable departed completely from reality. Since I used the word "pairs" repeatedly I fail to see how that became one "pair" of wires in the article that you attributed to me. << Below is the original text from Bill describing the extra "twisting step" required for TWGS cable construction: >> To make a TransWarp GS cable it is necessary to slit one end of the cable into adjacent pairs of wires for a length of about 3/4² using a razor blade. Twist each pair with a needle nose pliers or tweezers or your fingers so that each pair of wires will be reversed when the pairs are slipped into the thinner socket connecter. Push the wires from side to side to set each one under the appropriate connection point and crimp the connector over the wires. This is a tricky operation, a misplaced or un-twisted wire will result in a non-functional cable. A pair of ice cream pop sticks cut to half-width and held together at one end with a rubber band serves as a handy tool to hold the twisted pairs in position as they are slipped into the connector. << I do apologize to Bill and to our TWGS readers. It is annoying to have a piece published with an error inserted by someone else. The 'Good News' is that directions aimed at TWGS users in the edited version do not make sense and are impossible to follow. (The directions for the Zip-GS cable are okay, since there are no reversals.) The 'Bad News' is that, due to _my_ error, Bill's article contain's an error and TWGS users will have to wait until the Winter issue, a note in some other Apple II publication, or this posting to get directions which make sense. Rubywand