hello those microprocessors are used in some domestic computers in
russia),BK0010,BK0011,uknc and dvk (that is the names of those
computers),lots of documentation exist for those machine with complete
schematics.As I have several of those machines I have a page on my web site
about them with lots of links
www.radio-astronomie.com/ordinosaurus.htm
you do not have to wait in ebay ,it is possible to buy them new from a
company called evita
http://www.evita.lt/
at about one usd (yes) for the cpu...yes a pdp11 for one dollar,Ken Olsen
was wrong definetely when he thought that pdp
could not be at everyones home.I also found socket for them,look on my site
for start.
Of course docs are in russian but can be translated easily,and
electronic schematics are universal language,all circuits are ttl,memories
are standard dynamic rams.
My site is in french ,but is easily translated by ggogle or others.
Best regards for all,
do not hesitate to ask.
alain nierveze
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave McGuire" <mcguire at neurotica.com>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Friday, November 18, 2011 4:33 AM
Subject: Russian PDP-11 clones, was Re: VHDL PDP11
On 11/17/2011 10:25 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
I've seen it mentioned before on the list,
but I'm wondering if
anyone here has taken one of the Soviet PDP-11 CPU clones and done
anything with them. In particular, I'm curious about the 64-pin DIP
version with EIS.
I've seen them offered a lot on eBay for very attractive prices.
Me too; I've always been curious about them. I seem to recall them
having been discussed here a year or two ago, with the conclusion that
there wasn't enough documentation available to actually build anything
around them.
I would love for that to not be the case!
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
New Kensington, PA