PDP11/74

From: Bill Pechter <pechter_at_pechter.dyndns.org>
Date: Mon Dec 15 10:34:35 2003

>
>
>Message: 16
>Date: Sun, 14 Dec 2003 18:52:21 -0800 (PST)
>From: "Eric Smith" <eric_at_brouhaha.com>
>Subject: RE: Building a PDP-11 for the first time
>To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk_at_classiccmp.org>
>Message-ID:
> <33073.64.169.63.74.1071456741.squirrel_at_ruckus.brouhaha.com>
>Content-Type: text/plain;charset=iso-8859-1
>
>Antonio wrote:
>
>
>>> I don't know what the performance figures were for the
>>> 11/74 either. However, the beast was deemed to be too
>>> hard to maintain. Too many cables, too much downtime.
>>
>>
>
>That was one of the rumors, but I've never believed it. There's no fundamental reason why it should have been any harder to maintain than any other large computer. I think this was just a feeble attempt by DEC management to come up with an excuse to give customers, when they didn't want to admit the real reason the product was cancelled.
>
>Yes, it needed more memory cables than any other PDP-11, but it's
>utterly ridiculous to think that would be a serious problem. We're only talking about 68 memory cables per CPU for a maximally configured PDP-11/74, compared to 16 for a maximally configured PDP-11/70.
>When was the last time you had a PDP-11/70 memory cable go bad?
>
>The memory cabling was in fact comparable in magnitude to that of a large VAX 11/782 configuration.
>
>

Gimme a break. The MK memory cables were often the cause of multiple
problems and the multiport version set up on a bunch of conjoined
11/70-type boxes
would've been a nightmare. XXDP+ would've had to be loaded into a
shared memory partition and it would've been a large PITA for the
systems manager
to have to do that while it was running.

They could've required a preloaded diag monitor that could've been
switched to the down box, though to get around this.

Anyway, the 11/782's were large pains only when the SBA interconnects
went bad
which was a fairly rare occurrance when the machine was fully
installed. The SBI
cables were about 4 inches long... the 12-18 inch ones were used between
cabinets.

How many feet of MK cable would that have been!

The MK cables were often nicked, cut or just plain and could've been
sliced by tiles
in multcpu configs... etc.

I used 1/4 of an 11/74 at DEC Princeton. A nice pretty front panel and
I'd have loved to work on one full-up.

But maintaining it would've been a PITA.

BIll
pechter_at_monmouth.com
Received on Mon Dec 15 2003 - 10:34:35 GMT

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