On 07/26/2018 09:54 AM, Anders Nelson via cctalk wrote:
To get that power, did they have to use a rotary convertor from 60Hz
3-phase to get 400Hz?


IBM mainframes in the late 1950's early 1960's (707x and 709x series) used motor generators to generate 400 Hz 3-phase power, which was distributed to all the major components.

For the 360, they came up with a solid state version, it ran the CPU, memory and such on 2500 Hz single-phase power, using a "converter-inverter". It rectified and filtered the 3-phase 50- or 60-Hz input to DC, and then used ultra-fast SCRs to invert it. But, the energy stored in the filter caps in that was way smaller than the rotational energy in a motor generator set. So, the 360 was susceptible to power glitches and dips. For the 370, they went back to a motor-generator set actually INSIDE the CPU cabinet to produce 415 Hz 3-phase power. Larger systems often had a UPS with electronic inverters in them.

Jon

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