help id a chip
Mike Stein
mhs.stein at gmail.com
Wed Jan 17 14:14:10 CST 2018
The L & TC series (among others?) used a number of those chips; I *might* even be able to look up what it did but I doubt that it'd be useful information ;-)
m
----- Original Message -----
From: "Pete Lancashire via cctech" <cctech at classiccmp.org>
To: "william degnan" <billdegnan at gmail.com>; "General Discussion: On-Topic Posts" <cctech at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2018 1:19 PM
Subject: Re: help id a chip
> Burroughs
>
> One has to love the 1/8" spacing.
>
> I have a box of them from when I worked there. I may even have one of the
> very rare test sockets.
>
> The division I was in was considering using the technology. I can't
> remember what actually used them. Way too long ago.
> The plant I was in built the B7xx family.
>
> I
>
> -pete
>
> On Wed, Jan 17, 2018 at 10:05 AM, william degnan via cctech <
> cctech at classiccmp.org> wrote:
>
>> Can someone tell me what chip this is?
>>
>> http://vintagecomputer.net/pictures/2017/Objects/P1010114.JPG
>> http://vintagecomputer.net/pictures/2017/Objects/P1010093.JPG
>> http://vintagecomputer.net/pictures/2017/Objects/P1010094.JPG
>>
>> (note ..94/94 show the item in a sealed in storage material)
>>
>> the underside consists of 4 sets of 12 pins plus the corner 3 pins, as
>> shown on the top of the chip.
>>
>> thanks
>>
>>
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