Plessy core memory
Noel Chiappa
jnc at mercury.lcs.mit.edu
Sun Jan 9 19:40:47 CST 2022
> From: Chris Zach
> the secondary memory (a Plessy 700101-100) may be shorting the -15 line
> for some reason. Working on it, but does anyone have a manual or
> anything like that for this kind of memory board?
I've got a Plessey core memory manual somewhere, but I can't find it, so I
don't know if it's the one you are looking for. I got it from Paul Birkel; it
was a duplicate, and he scanned his and sent the scan off, but I don't think
it made it online.
> Alternately, what kind of Unibus 16k memory board exists to get a 11/10
> from 16kw to 32kw of memory?
It all depends on what kind of -11/10 you have.
If yours is in a 5-1/4" box, you can't plug a DEC memory card into the SPC
slots that some of the CPU-holding backplane versions have because DEC
memories (other than the ones like the MM11-L and -U, which are multi-board
core systems that require custom backplanes) all require MUD slots, not SPC.
All of the CPU backplanes on that machine are for a _specific_ kind of core
memory (MM11-L or MM11-U), see here:
https://gunkies.org/wiki/PDP-11/05
There are I think some third-party memories which can be used (Dataram,
maybe?) but I don't have time to go into them.
If you have a 10-1/2" box, you can mount a MUD backplane - but you might
still have an issue because the older BA11-D boxes use the old 9-pin power
connectors, and the MUD backplanes (DD11-C, -D, etc) all use the newer 15-pin
ones.
(Again, there are some oddball ones, and again, I don't have time to go into
them.)
If you're lucky enough to have one of the ones that will take a MUD backplane,
an MS11-E/F/H/J:
https://gunkies.org/wiki/MS11_32KB_MOS_memory
would be an option.
> On a related note, where did +20 come from for Unibus and which systems
> even supported it? Was it an 11/45,11/70 thing?
The later /05's, /40's and /45's were the first ones to provide +20V, for the
then-new MM11-U. On machines which took H744 'brick's, the _later_ harnesses
could take a H754 +20V, -5V regulator 'brick'. Alternatively, _some_ BA11-L's
(used for the /04 and /34) had the right version of H777:
https://gunkies.org/wiki/H777_Power_Supply
to provide +20V.
Noel
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