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Getting core memories to work was black magic with the original designers at
your side; that's something that you got a 1620 stack working on your own. For the price of a few electrolytics -- or a new switching PS -- and a few more hours, it definitely sounds worth resuscitating. 73, Dave, AA6YQ "R J Carpenter" wrote in message ... "Dave, AA6YQ" wrote in message news:7_vbb.546518$uu5.90927@sccrnsc04... Very cool. What did you use for memory? 73, Dave, AA6YQ "R J Carpenter" wrote in message ... "Dave, AA6YQ" wrote in message news:lARab.522300$YN5.348403@sccrnsc01... No cheating! If you're going to homebrew a PDP-8, you have to build it out of discrete TTL. I had my PDP-8S work-alike operational about 30 years ago. I built it from TTL. I bought a surplus IBM 1620 core memory stack from Burstein-Applebee. I found a couple of the connecting wires were never properly soldered - which must have been the reason for junking it. The 1620 had 10,000 12-bit words of core. Actually every location had two 6-bit memory words. The 1620 was a variable word length machine, with one bit of each 6-bit memory word being the "word mark". I only used 4096 12-bit words of the memory, the normal PDP-8 memory size. DEC's interactive FOCAL language allow easy programming of simple problems. I also had their assembler. The thing is buried in my garage, minus some big electrolytics. 73 de Bob w3otc |