| Home | Deluxe Monitor Stand |
The Dell model 6Y667 Monitor Stand is part of a docking station I happen to use at work. At one point I wondered if it might also be suitable for use with my flat Commodore 128 at home. A quick Web search found them to be in plentiful supply from a number of computer surplus outlets and parts recyclers, and I ended-up buying one on eBay (used, but in relatively good condition) for just $5.99 (USD) plus shipping.
When the monitor stand arrived, a few preparatory steps were needed before attempting to use it with my 128 there is a sliding docking mechanism located on the bottom-interior of the stand, designed to latch-onto the laptops port replicator. Since it protrudes about half an inch, it needed to be removed. By gently lifting the right side, it snapped-out without much effort and without anything breaking. A cable connects it to the stand. Since I intended to re-use the cable later (see below), I cut it as closely as possible to the sliding mechanism, to maximize its available length, then tucked it away into the slot it was protruding from. With the bottom-interior of the stand now free from obstructions and flush with the natural curvature of the stand sides, the 128 could now be placed inside. The image on the right is how the stand looks at this point. The interior of the stand has a shallow slope of about 5-10 degrees. My 128 is positioned so it extends about 3 inches forward of the base, where it meets the desk surface, and to me the slope isnt even noticeable (see final photos below).
Overall, I was impressed at how well this stand lends itself to being used not only with a different system but one designed nearly two decades earlier! While not wanting to sound like a salesman, I found this unit offers several advantages over other monitor stands Ive seen or used with Commodore hardware over the years:
While the stand works great with the Commodore 128, there shouldnt be any reason why it wouldnt work equally well with any of the other ‘flat’ Commodore computers. The next section discusses the LED-backed buttons on the face of the monitor stand and how they might be exploited this may be of particular interest to Amiga owners, since it would eliminate the need to reach for the switch on the power supply ‘brick’, allowing it to be situated in a more convenient location.
Like many modern docking stations, this stand includes a few status LEDs and a couple soft-touch switches that were of course designed originally for use with a laptop. As any PC-user with an ATX-based power supply knows, the soft-touch, momentary-on power switches offer a real convenience. After setting-up the 128 and monitor, I thought it would be great if the unused electronics on the monitor stand could somehow be exploited to serve a similar purpose by controlling power to the 128 and monitor, while also providing visual feedback as to the power state so I started a part-time project to see if I could put something together toward that end. It took about three weeks to reverse-engineer the wiring in the monitor stand, settle on a schematic and wiring scheme, gather the parts and essemble everything. Having only taken one year of Electronics in High School, I dont consider myself electronically-inclined, but the idea was too compelling not to try.
A hole was drilled in the back of the stand and the cable that was tucked-away earlier was run out through it (see photo on left). There are 4 LEDs total on the face of this monitor stand, but for this project I was only interested in wiring the two pushbuttons and the LEDs behind them, so 8 lines needed to be tapped (see wiring diagram). I thought about using a panel of four adjacent RCA jacks, but settled instead on CAT5 networking cable with RJ-45 terminators, since it provides a single 8-conductor cable, rather than four individual or two pairs of RCA-terminated cables. The caveat to this approach is that the shield is used as one of the lines for the ‘Power’ switch. Since the black and red wires werent being used, I snipped them off, ran one of them alongside the other 7 in the RJ-45 plug before crimping, then soldered the end back onto the shield (see photo on right). Not the most elegant solution, but it served the purpose of making the connection. The cable only extended about a foot from the stand, so I added an RJ-45 coupler and standard CAT5 network cable to extend it another 6 feet so it reaches the power control box.
| The schematic for the power control board is based mainly on Bill Bowdens MOSFET Toggle Circuit, driving a relay to switch 120 VAC power to the 128 power supply and monitor. The LEDs could have been driven in parallel to the load (relay) in Bills schematic, with green for ‘ON’ and unlit for off. Since the LEDs on the stand are bidirectional, with amber indicating “Standby Mode”, additional circuitry has been added to exploit this capability, based in part on the following Bi-directional LED driver. Here is the combined, final schematic and board layout used in this project. |
![]()
|
Since space was at a premium inside the project box housing the circuit and outlets, the 9-Volt power supply remains external and plugs-into a jack (I didn't really want to butcher it up anyway). There are two independent pairs of switching circuits and relays on the circuit board the original intention being to use them independently for the computer and monitor. However, I didnt realize until hooking-up the power receptacle that the outlets are wired in parallel. So for now, the control box switches both the computer and monitor in tandem... which isnt really such a drawback when you think about it. After all, who uses their Commie with the monitor switched-off, anyway?
Photos of Final ProjectMonitor stand front view (click to enlarge)![]() Monitor stand diagonal view (click to enlarge) ![]() Monitor stand side view (click to enlarge) ![]() Power switched-on (monitor stand LEDs lit in green) ![]() Power switched-off (“Standby Mode” monitor stand LEDs lit in amber) ![]() The “Rats Nest” final project hooked-up and in-use. It aint pretty, but it doesnt really matter when its buried behind the furniture, right?
|
| Top Home |