Metrovick 950

Metrovick 950
Metrovick 950
Manufacturer Metropolitan-Vickers
Release date 1956 (1956)

The Metrovick 950 was a transistorized computer, built from 1956 onwards by British company Metropolitan-Vickers, to the extent of six[1] or seven machines,[2] which were "used commercially within the company"[2] or "mainly for internal use".[1] The 950 appears to have been Metrovick's first and last commercial computer offering.

Contents

Transistor Computer

Prototype

In November 1953 Richard Grimsdale and Douglas Webb of Manchester University first demonstrated their prototype transistorized computer using 92 point-contact transistors and 550 diodes in order to test the suitability of transistors in improving the reliability of the Manchester Mark 1 computer. This machine was similar to the Mark I, except that it did not include Williams tubes and used only the magnetic drum for main memory. The machine was based on a 48-bit word, although 4 bits were used for timing and thus not available for program use. This machine used thermionic valves to generate a clock frequency of 125 kHz.

The only storage used was a drum (rescued from the Manchester Mark 1). This meant that the average random access time to a word in store was half a drum revolution, i.e., with 64 words on a track, 32 times the random access time for a word if it could be stored in a true RAM. So the Transistor Computer was slower than the Mark 1. Both versions had a pseudo 2-address (or 1+1) instruction format, where the address of the next instruction to be obeyed was contained within each instruction, to facilitate "optimum programming". The drum was even used to store the Accumulator and the Current Instruction.

Improved version

By 1955 the design was re-built with a Mark I-style B-line accumulator/index register and hardware multiplier. The added circuitry brought the machine to a total of 250 transistors. It used only 150 watts of power, an astonishingly low figure in an era when machines typically used tens of kilowatts to warm their valves. The new model could add two 44-bit numbers in 1.5 drum revolutions, which, at a drum spin rate of 3000 RPM, amounted to roughly 30 milliseconds per addition. Although faster than the Mark I internally, the lack of Williams tubes made it run much more slowly; the Mark I could add two 40-bit numbers in 1.8 milliseconds.

The prototype computer (Nov. 1953) had a simple 7 function order code and one track of 64 words for main storage. For the full-size computer (Apr 1955) the order code and storage were much extended and a hardware multiplier included. A third "regenerative" drum track formed an 8-word B store. Arithmetic was serial, with a pulse rate of 125,000 per second. The instruction times were directly related to the 30 millisecond drum revolution time (the basic unit being the time to read a word, i.e. 1/64th of a revolution).

The expanded 1955 machine had a total of 200 point-contact transistors and 1300 point diodes,[1] which resulted in a power consumption of 150 watts. There were considerable reliability problems with the early batches of transistors and the average error free run in 1955 was only 1.5 hours.

Metrovick 950

Metropolitan-Vickers became interested in the design after the success the university had selling computing time on the Mark I to commercial customers. They adopted the design of the 1955 Manchester University transistor computer as the Metrovick 950. The only relevant experience in Metropolitan-Vickers was that in the early 1930s they had manufactured a mechanical calculating machine in the form of the differential analyser in conjunction with Douglas Hartree of Manchester University.

They changed all the circuits to more reliable types of junction transistors,[1] although it appears they may have built one example with the earlier designs. The production version was known as the Metrovick 950 and was built from 1956 to the extent of six[1] or seven machines,[2] which were "used commercially within the company"[2] or "mainly for internal use".[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f David P. Anderson, Tom Kilburn: A Pioneer of Computer Design, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing - Volume 31, Number 2, April-June 2009, p. 84
  2. ^ a b c d 1953 - Transistorized Computers Emerge, Computer History Museum

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Metrovick — is a contraction of Metropolitan Vickers, a British engineering company. Articles include: Metropolitan Vickers, the company Metrovick 950, computer Metrovick F.2, turbo jet engine Metrovick diesel locomotive, see British Rail Class 28 See also… …   Wikipedia

  • Metropolitan-Vickers — Type private (subsidiary or joint ownership) Industry heavy electrical engineering Fate brand removed in 1960, ultimately part of GEC from 1967 Metropolitan Vickers, Metrovick, or M …   Wikipedia

  • Manchester computers — Replica of the Small Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM) at the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester The Manchester computers …   Wikipedia

  • Metropolitan-Vickers — La Metropolitan Vickers, est une entreprise britannique d ingénierie électrique du milieu du XXe siècle, connu à l origine sous le nom de British Westinghouse. Très diversifiée, elle était particulièrement réputée pour ses équipements… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Manchester Mark I — This article is about the early British computer . The term Manchester Mark I can also refer to the Avro Manchester heavy bomber in RAF service during the early stages of World War II .The Manchester Mark I was one of the earliest electronic… …   Wikipedia

  • Ferranti Mercury — The Mercury was an early 1950s commercial computer built by Ferranti. It was the successor to the Ferranti Mark 1, adding a floating point unit for improved performance, and increased reliability by replacing the Williams tube memory with core… …   Wikipedia

  • Transistor computer — A Transistor computer was a computer which used transistors instead of vacuum tubes. The first generation of electronic computers used vacuum tubes, which generated large amounts of heat, were bulky, and were unreliable. A second generation of… …   Wikipedia

  • Richard Grimsdale — Richard Lawrence Grimsdale, (September 18, 1929 – December 6, 2005) was a British electrical engineer and computer pioneer, who helped to design the world s first transistorized computer. Early lifeRichard Grimsdale was born in Australia, in 1929 …   Wikipedia

  • Richard L. Grimsdale — Richard Lawrence Grimsdale (* 18. September 1929 in Australien; † 6. Dezember 2005) war ein britischer Elektroingenieur und Computerpionier, der den ersten transistorisierten Computer entwarf.[1] Sein Vater, ein englischer Ingenieur, arbeitete an …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire — This article is about the jet aero engine, for the vehicle see Armstrong Siddeley Sapphire (motor car) Sapphire Preserved Armstrong Siddeley Sap …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”