DEC Sold the LSI-11 board, board set and in some cases the chip set, through
its Components Product Line. There was at that time (1975 onwards) loads of
documentation available for the LSI-11 as there was for any product destined
for the OEM market place.
The OEM side of DEC was huge. Yearly shipments of 100+ 11/34A's to one OEM
customer in the UK were not unusual.
At that time the magic number was 40%. Europe was 40% of the DEC world wide
turnover and the UK was 40% of Europe. At one point DEC had at least ten
(possibility as many as fifteen) regional offices in the UK alone. They were
second only to IBM.
Rod Smallwood
?
?
-----Original Message-----
From: cctech-bounces at
classiccmp.org [mailto:cctech-bounces at
classiccmp.org]
On Behalf Of Dave McGuire
Sent: 22 February 2012 06:25
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
Subject: Re: Starting a PDP 11/03
On 02/22/2012 01:10 AM, Eric Smith wrote:
Dave McGuire wrote:
Not the FIS, but the LSI-11 chipset itself,
either four or five chips.
It's the WD Pascal MicroEngine chipset, with its microcode rewritten
to execute the PDP-11 instruction set.
Other way around. The WD Pascal Microengine came about a few years after
the LSI-11 (1979 vs. February 1975). It was actually the third
"standard" use of that chipset, after the LSI-11 and the WD16 (very
nearly PDP-11 compatible, used in the Alpha Micro systems before they
switched to the 68K).
Was it really?? Wow, how very embarrassing. I stand corrected. And
to think that bit of misinformation has been rattling around in my head
since the 11/73 (not /03) was a current machine!
The chipset was specifically designed for the LSI-11.
It is optimized
for instruction decode and dispatch for the PDP-11 instruction set, and
is somewhat less efficient for implementing a bytecode instruction set
like UCSD P-code.
I read somewhere that it's actually an 8-bit data path, which always
seemed odd to me. Very interesting stuff. Is the chipset fully
documented anywhere?
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA