On 03/30/2016 10:51 AM, William Donzelli wrote:
Somebody mentioned a house with a collapsed floor.  A friend of mine bought
two 770/145s and a GE/Intersil memory box.  (I bought the other memory box,
in 1979 or so, a **MEG** of memory was a big deal!)
I assume you mean 370/145s/
Yes.
  Whatever happened to them? In 1979, they
would have been still usable machines.


Well, the problem with the 370's were peripherals and power. Although the lower level 370's had integrated channels, you still needed control units and drives. To do any real work, you'd need at least a DASD controller and drives and a com controller. Probably at least a tape controller and one drive to do backups and load software. That won't fit in the bedroom of a 2-bedroom house, which was where this thing was!

Second was the 370s used a motor alternator set to convert 50/60 Hz power to 415 Hz power. To keep compatibility, they used the same size MG set for a range of machines. So, the 145 had a 17 KVA output alternator with a 20 Hp 208V 3-phase motor. We tried to build a phase converter to run the motor off the guy's 60 A 240 V service, but the reactive current was over 60 A and would blow the main breaker. The main logic supply for the /145 was 390 A at +1.3 and -3 V, so about 1.5 KW. We should have just got a bunch of big 5V switcher supplies and tuned them down to the appropriate voltage. But, that would have likely cost more than he paid for the machines, maybe even surplus.

The 145 was not a real high performance machine. Although the memory was 64 bits+parity wide (for ECC) the main data path was only 16-bits wide, and the microcode word was rather vertical, so while 360/50 and 360/65 could execute simple instructions in about 4 microcode cycles, the /145 took something like 7+. A 32 bit add register to register was 1.4 us, add memory to register was 2.4 us. Floating point divide was 28 us (short) or 88 us (long).

Jon


Reply via email to