On 12 December 2015 at 22:13, Eric Christopherson
<echristopherson at gmail.com> wrote:
I'm reading about those terminals and find it just
fascinating how they
used acoustic delay line memory to remember the pixels. But I have lots
of questions:
1. Did the cables connecting the 2260s to the display controller
actually contain the delay lines themselves, over the whole length; or
were the delay lines just inside the controller and then some electronic
signal was sent out to the terminals?
The delay lines were only within the 2848 control unit. From the
descriptions by others on the list, the 2260 displays were completely
dumb, and would display whatever was sent to them if I'm reading
things correctly.
2. I would think that the wave travelling along the
delay line would
weaken over time. How was it refreshed?
Once the signal reached the end of the delay line it was sensed,
regenerated and put back into the delay line, while also being
converted to scanlines to be sent to the 2260. Similar to the mercury
delay line memories of older machines like the UNIVAC, or EDSAC.
Though the 2848's delay lines were wire based not long mercury tanks.
3. What kind of speed could be acheived, and did this
depend on the
number of connected terminals?
You can most likely find that information in a manual. I think that
the A27-2700 manual will have it, located on BitSavers, of course:
<http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/ibm/2260/>
Not an expert, just someone with some itnerest in it.
Cheers,
Christian
--
Christian M. Gauger-Cosgrove
STCKON08DS0
Contact information available upon request.