JohnRoberts said:
OK fixed that for you... may need to move this too,,, but keep the interesting photo's coming.
Are you sure anyone else actually wants to see this crap? (and thanks for rethreading)
Alright, here's another one. I already posted core RAM from 1975, with the tiniest cores known to mankind. That half a core was 4096 beads (64^2) in less than 2" square, threaded by hand (yikes!). It was from my high school's NCR mainframe, I actually used this core back then, just not sure how. Hope they didn't miss two of them when I graduated,.
Just kidding.
Now we'll go with the world's largest cores, in ROM.
Yeah, ROM, from 1969. This beast is 19" long, you can see the ends of the 96 U-shaped ferrite halves that mate, upper board has several turns around one half of the U, the lower board is up to 64 thin pages of copper traces that either go through the core (1), or around it (0). Presumably, shoot a pulse through the various traces, and the coils on the upper board either pick it up, or don't. Or the other way around, who knows.
Wacky stuff. Anybody have an idea of what this may have come out of? I wonder if they had a compiler that would take code as input, and auto-route those traces for in or out?
Gene