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DB-19 Madness

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db19-pile

I have the DB-19 connectors. They’re mine, all mine! MINE!! MWAAAHAHAHAHA!!!!!

*Cough* Sorry about that, I don’t know came over me. So the great DB-19 panic of 2015 has ended, and I’ve got 581 of these metal and plastic beauties. Of course there will probably be another DB-19 panic in 2016 when these ones run out, but hopefully I’ll have worked out another solution before then.

If you’re new to this discussion and wondering what a DB-19 is, it’s a D-SUB connector like the more familiar DB-9 serial or DB-25 parallel connectors used on many older computers. My main product is a disk emulator for 1980′s Macintosh computers, and those computers were built with a DB-19 floppy port, so my emulator board must have a DB-19 connector. The trouble is that nobody has manufactured DB-19 connectors since about 1990, as far as I can tell. Since then the small remaining demand has been slowly draining the surplus warehouses that still have DB-19′s. Last month, the supply at the few big warehouses that still had them all went to zero, and it became virtually impossible to buy them anywhere.

This touched off a crazed panic on my part, and I went digging under every rock from San Jose to Skopje to Kuala Lumpur to find these things. And when I found some, I bought them ALL. I even got a friend of a friend to hand carry some connectors from Malaysia to California for me! After two weeks of furious hunting, the hoard above is my result. I can say with pretty good confidence that this is the largest remaining stockpile of DB-19s in the world. If anybody has more, they’ve certainly made them so difficult to find and buy that they may as well not exist.

So what happens in 2016 when the supply runs out? Plan A is to find a D-SUB manufacturer with some old DB-19 molds who is willing to make more, or who can adapt their existing DB-25 process to make DB-19s too. I’ve received several quotes from D-SUB manufacturers, but unfortunately I probably can’t afford the setup costs to do this. I’ve contacted a few people in the Atari and Apple II worlds who also use DB-19 connectors, and if we pool our efforts and share the cost, it might work. I’m continuing to talk with D-SUB manufacturers in the hopes that we can find a solution that works for them and for me.

Plan B is to make a DB-19 substitute from a custom PCB and header pins. It wouldn’t really be a DB-19, but it would fit a DB-19 female socket, and could be manufactured fairly easily.

Plan C is the brute force solution: get a huge pile of DB-25 connectors, and cut each one with a band saw. :-)

 
Footnote: Many people have written to me about DB-19 connectors they saw advertised for sale on the web. Thank you! Unfortunately, it’s very likely that the store does not actually have any DB-19 parts, and never will. It seems to be common practice for parts warehouses to list parts they don’t actually have available, and even for the web page to claim they’re in stock. Unless you hear directly from somebody at the store who can confirm they really do have DB-19 connectors, and how many they have, it’s probably just a phantom.

I’ve also found that many of the web-based parts warehouses are just alternate electronic storefronts for other warehouses, or aggregators for several other warehouses, but don’t actually have any inventory of their own. This makes it look like there are more people selling DB-19 connectors than there really are. Instead, it’s just different salesmen all selling the same stock.


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