Correction they were 3081K 32's, one of the other posts jolted my memory back into focus. Sorry for the drift.
--- On Tue, 5/12/09, Patrick Falcone <patrick.falco...@verizon.net> wrote: From: Patrick Falcone <patrick.falco...@verizon.net> Subject: Re: 308x Processors - was "Mainframe articles" To: "IBM Mainframe Discussion List" <IBM-MAIN@bama.ua.edu> Date: Tuesday, May 12, 2009, 1:59 PM We had 3081's at a time share back in the mid 80's. At one point we took 2 3081G's and had IBM put them together to form a 3084 Q64 w/PIF. --- On Tue, 5/12/09, Martin Packer <martin_pac...@uk.ibm.com> wrote: From: Martin Packer <martin_pac...@uk.ibm.com> Subject: 308x Processors - was "Mainframe articles" To: IBM-MAIN@bama.ua.edu Date: Tuesday, May 12, 2009, 9:39 AM 3083 was Uni, 3081 was Dyadic (2 -way Non-Partitionable), 3084 was Partitionable 4-way. Base and X models with almost unrememberable model letters. Interestingly, later on you could get a 1+1 2-way and a 2+1 3-way. The benefits of these were larger caches (as you got 2 of them). I'm not sure who bought these, though. Martin Martin Packer Performance Consultant IBM United Kingdom Ltd +44-20-8832-5167 +44-7802-245-584 email: martin_pac...@uk.ibm.com Twitter ID: MartinPacker "They're figuring out that collaboration isn't a productivity hit, it makes them smarter." Sam Palmisano on BlogCentral, 26 November 2008 Unless stated otherwise above: IBM United Kingdom Limited - Registered in England and Wales with number 741598. Registered office: PO Box 41, North Harbour, Portsmouth, Hampshire PO6 3AU ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to lists...@bama.ua.edu with the message: GET IBM-MAIN INFO Search the archives at http://bama.ua.edu/archives/ibm-main.html