Hi,
The '11/05 -- when used to boot; it doesn't have to be used in the
boot process -- is used to connect RK05s to the PDP-15.
I can give a whole long spiel as to what the '11 is actually used for,
but I'd just be echoing information garnered from documentation on
BitSavers. Plus, I believe that Mr. Ross would quite possibly know
much more than I.
Cheers,
Christian
On 9 May 2012 01:08, Ethan Dicks <ethan.dicks at gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, May 8, 2012 at 11:27 PM, B Degnan <billdeg
at degnanco.com> wrote:
You wrote:
?"Mike Ross' exhibit consisted of a PDP 11/05 used to interface with
?a PDP 15, in two racks. He demonstrated restoration techniques for
?attendees. I am not sure exactly what you call this console, there is
?no "PDP 15" on the panel, but I assume it's some kind of I/O device
?that complements the (not pictured) PDP 11/05 used to presumably
?bootstrap this thing."
That _is_ the PDP-15 front panel - if you look, there are 18 data bits.
The PDP-15 CPU was the large spread of M-series cards on the
backplane above this front panel. ?Its memory was in a black box below
(and not there for much of the weekend). ?The PDP-11/05 is self-contained
and does the same job as the PDP-11/03 in a VAX-11/780 or the PDP-11
in various models of PDP-10. ?In each case, the PDP-11 boots from its
own ROMs to start up enough code to feed the larger processor. ?In the
case of the VAX-11/780, the PDP-11/03 has one RX01 floppy drive. ?I
don't know what this PDP-11 uses, but there must be some local mass
storage that's part of the scheme.
Many I/O devices of the day did have blinkenlights indicators (usually installed
at the top of the rack), but not this many control switches.
-ethan