LSI-11 WCS and MICROMs

From: Megan <mbg_at_TheWorld.com>
Date: Thu Oct 31 17:20:00 2002

>I just realized that my reply to Jerome's inquiry about the
>LSI-11 module with five chips was probably wrong. IIRC, the
>LSI-11 chip set consists of the control chip, data chip, and
>two MICROMs for the base instruction set. The EIS/FIS (KEV11)
>is a single additional MICROM. So the original quad-height
>LSI-11 module would have four 40-pin chips without the EIS/FIS,
>or five with.

Correct... and with 5 sockets, there would be one left over
for either the EIS/FIS option or WCS, not both.

>Was it the LSI-11/2 half-height module that sometimes used
>a hybrid with two MICROMs? If so, it was probably the two
>microms that implemented the standard instruction set, in
>order to leave a socket open for the KEV11.

Actually, I've seen the dual microm used on both 11/03s and
on 11/2s, as well as on the PDT (I have a couple of those
which have been so modified). The 3007/3010 chips are
combined into one dual microm. This would allow boards
with only 4 sockets (like the PDT) to add EIS/FIS.

>On the 11/23 and 11/24, some of the chips were also on dual-chip
>hybrids.

The FPU chip for the 11/23,24 was a dual carrier chip. The
CIS option was a hex-carrier chip. It had 6 of those small
gold chips on it, and spanned two sockets of the 11/23[+]
board. I don't know if it could go on the 11/24. (I have a
KDF11-B with one of these chips on it).

                                        Megan Gentry
                                        Former RT-11 Developer

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Received on Thu Oct 31 2002 - 17:20:00 GMT

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