Sounds like the same marketing idea as the 11/15-11/20, 11/05-11/10,
11/35-11/40 and the 11/45-11/50. I think they changed product lines and oem
ideas about that time.
Thanks, Paul
On Mon, Jun 24, 2013 at 8:59 PM, Lyle Bickley <lbickley at bickleywest.com>wrote:
When I saw Jack Rubin selling a PDP-11/34/39 manual on
eBay, I had to
buy it. I thought perhaps the "11/39" was just a misprint - but...
The preliminary manual is titled "PDP-11/34/39 USER'S GUIDE" and is (c)
1975. Below the copyright is: "Written by PDP-11 Engineering".
In perusing the manual, I quickly went to the section describing the
two systems. Here's the opening paragraph in section 3.1:
"PDP-11/34 AND PDP-11/39 SYSTEM DESCRIPTION"
"The PDP-11/34 and PDP-11/39 Computer Systems consist of a set of
modular building blocks combined to suit a customers needs. The
PDP-11/34 System is designed for original equipment manufacturers
[OEM's] while the PDP-11/39 system is designed for end users..."
The manual then defines the "basic components" of each system.
Both contain a KD11-E central processor, KY11-LA Operators Console,
Unibus, M9302 Unibus Terminator and Core or MOS memory.
The differences are:
The 11/34 contains:
M9301-YA Terminator/ROM
The 11/39 contains:
M9301-YB Terminator/Boot/Diagnostic
DL11-W Serial Line Interface
M7850 Parity Controller
My guess is that DEC Marketing decided that only one system model made
sense - and the original "11/34" configuration was scrapped and the
"11/39" configuration became the 11/34 we know it...
The manual also contains a number of hand written notes and
corrections - and on first view looks to be substantially different
than the "PDP-11/34 User's Guide" we 11/34 fans have come to appreciate.
Cheers,
Lyle
--
Bickley Consulting West Inc.
http://bickleywest.com
"Black holes are where God is dividing by zero"