plated wire memory
Nigel Johnson
nw.johnson at ieee.org
Sun Oct 20 09:45:27 CDT 2019
I remember an IBM engineer talking about this at our ham radio club. The
wire was coiled inside a drum and pulses were sent down the wire. The
'read head' was a magnetic pickup at the other end of the coil - and
access time was however long it took the pulse to arrive at the other
end. Therefore storage capacity was inversely proportional to data
quantity, however at that time I was working with 660kB Univac FH330
drums for swapping and the 2-ton Fastrand for 164kB of long-term
storage, so it has to be taken in context!
Although the read was actually non-destructive, the pulse had to be
regenerated to go around agaiun.
Is that maybe what you are thinking of?
cheers,
Nigel
On 20/10/2019 10:35, dwight via cctalk wrote:
> I was just listening to a video on the Voyager space craft. It used an interesting type of memory, called magnetic wire memory. There is only a little bit of information of it on the web. It is clever in that has a non-destructive read. I just wondered if any one else was familiar with this type of memory.
> Dwight
>
>
--
Nigel Johnson
MSc., MIEEE
VE3ID/G4AJQ/VA3MCU
Amateur Radio, the origin of the open-source concept!
You can reach me by voice on Skype: TILBURY2591
If time travel ever will be possible, it already is. Ask me again yesterday
This e-mail is not and cannot, by its nature, be confidential. En route from me to you, it will pass across the public Internet, easily readable by any number of system administrators along the way.
Nigel Johnson <nw.johnson at ieee.org>
Please consider the environment when deciding if you really need to print this message
More information about the cctalk
mailing list