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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jan 2010
Posts: 7
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Ancient circuitry
"Canuck57" wrote in message
...
On 16/01/2010 6:17 PM, wrote:
On Sat, 16 Jan 2010 14:05:54 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote:
Here at work, we are repairing the vacuum control circuitry for an
electron microscope made in 1979. It has 6 SN7400 chips. If I
remember, these are quad 2 input NAND gates. 2 of them have gone
bad
because the heat sinking of the board is not very good, you can
see
heat discoloration on the board.
Back in 1974, I was 18 and was experimenting with making computer
circuitry trying to make a computer cpu with a calculator chip and
a
buffer made from a bunch of 7400 gates as memory flip flops. I
never
got rid of all those old chips and still have several tubes of
them
unused.
Now, 36 years later, I find a use for them.
Never throw anything away ;-)
There are still plenty of places that still stock these things. I
never took the TTL plunge because I had IBM parts to play with but
I
have made a lot of CMOS (4xxx) stuff. Couple that with a big SSR
and
you can run humongous stuff straight from CMOS. (like my 11kw spa
heater)
Same deal, just that you are likely a few years yonger. Every TTL
has a CMOS counterpart in time and CMOS was a better/newer evolution
of the TTL. Used both myself but mostly TTL.
Was fun to tinker with those chips on bread boards. A joy many
today will never know.
I always wondered if the US government got a hold of an ancient
space ship and reverse engineered the electronics we have today. As
we accelerated down this path about as fast as socially possible
without regards to the hardware.
I remember saying to people at the time that it is unlikely I will
retire before we see a 4ghz computer with 4 CPUs and 4gb of ram and
4gb of hard drive as a commodity system.
Only 4ghz CPU stands between me and retirement. Bu the rest is
history.
You are a couple of years overdue. Put in those papers.
Depending on your definition of commodity of course.
http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pr...ease/21580.wss
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