Wow as a young computer lover this is just impressive . I love it , one can't imagine it till one sees it. Thank you very much for providing this visual representation and of course for your restoration . Incredible !
Bring back memories of my DEC field service days. These mid-systems were everywhere and thus my service calls were anywhere. What a way to make a paycheck.
Back in 1980 I worked as a computer repair technician and a lot of our customers ran PDP 11/34 and 11/70 systems. Once had to troubleshoot an 11/70 at a Navy facility in San Diego and spent 3 days isolating a stuck address bit which turned out to be a backplane wire wrap connection gone bad. These machines were monsters, but it was state of the art back then. I think my iPhone has way more processing power LOL, but the Massbus architecture of the 11/70 allowed it to support a ton of peripherals - disks, tapes, terminals - so you could support a medium size organization with the one CPU. Ah, heady stuff!
I loved that version of the 11/70. From manufacturing to field service. The look was sleek. I always had a penchant for Dec blue as well. Wonderful restoration work guys.
My lab had over 30 PDP 11/xx including 45, 60, 70 & 80’s. The disks had 5 platters holding the RS11M OS and my designed OS. They were used in groups of 3 to 5 integrated computers with all connected through busses! Amazing machines. The front panel was octal, but internally it was hexadecimal!
Great work, guys! It is nice to see the PDP-11 and RSTS running. The first computer I used was a PDP-11/20 in 1973, then a PDP-11/50 for several years. For nostalgia's sake, it would be nice if you could get a DECtape unit (TU55 or TU56) and a paper tape reader/punch (PC05).
Brilliant work! I didn't get to see these machines running live, but I'm really fascinated by them due to the influence of Unix (FreeBSD/Linux). Every time I go deeper into my research, I learn a lot from these technologies that are the basis of everything we use today! Congratulations on the excellent work of preservation and restoration! Best Regards, Marcos Pereira Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Your tape drive was a TK-90 I believe and was manufactured in Springfield, Mass before 1993. Probably between 90-93. In 93 as part as the big sell off, the Springfield facility was shut down. They produced all the tape drives, TE16, TU77-78 for DEC and also produced the first solid state HD, ESE20 as well as other smaller HD's. They had the largest clean room east of the Mississippi in the early 90's. I know, because I worked there and was outsourced in 1993 after 16 years with the company. We got to play around a lot with equipment and I had a system running RSTS of 100 users on a PDP 11/34 with 100k of memory. Yes, that is 100k of memory. Of course, no graphics but still 100k to run the OS. Had 3 RK05's to boot from. Later, moved up to a micro VAX that by then supported 16 bit graphics. Woo-hoo. That was amazing. Brings back a lot of memories.
When I was a kid in the 70's and 80's our school had a PDP-11 to handle their office applications. I remember seeing it when waiting to go to the principals office for some kind of grade school shenanigan's. Many many decades later I worked with MicroVAXs' that served as controllers on a particle accelerator. In fact the custom Q-bus cards from a PDP-11 were moved to a microVAX(sadly I don't remember the model numbers) while I was there. Cheers!
I never worked with a PDP-11, but did work with a Data General Eclispe S/130, which I think is in the same class. I still dream about the work I did over 40 years ago. Sean, the likes of us are on the way out, eyes and all... But I think we may have had the best of it.
Reminds me of a firm called ADS based in Oxford St, London in the mid-80s that had one of these. They ran computer training courses and used their own version of COBOL for writing programs for various commercial applications.
I love these old PDP machines. When I was in the Navy, we had PDP1170 that ran message processing applications. It ran using RSX11. Amazing machines of their time. Loved working with them. Required more hands on.
Mike - good to see that you are still with us. Barclay Road - I just fixed H7xx power supplies & Drico printers - you gave me no-end of help there. Fish 'n chips in overtime. Millshaw Park was the start of my computer career - MK3 vdu, SMD drives, 11/70, 11/44 (after a course with DEC in Reading), VAX 11/780 to start with . Then to the Glass Palace. I have you, Brian Lindley and others on my SYSTIME dvd! Great memories.
Absolutely amazing thank you everyone and well done keeping this lovely computer going. I bet there is a lot of Tea drunk whilst fettling this beast. I am so jealous, I would love to work at the NMOC but I live on the Isle of Man. Ah well I will visit again soon and look forward to seeing this in operation. Thanks :)
We had an 11/23 and an 11/73 with RSTS 90 at college.... but neither of ours had a hardware front-panel.... just before I started college, they got rid of their Data General Nova which was bedecked by blinkenlichts... I feel I was cheated. :( ;) Oh, incidentally I can be so sure of the RSTS version, 'cus I've got a printout to hand on my desk. ?????????? That VT-320 is way to modern to be authentic ;) Needs a nice VT-100.
VT100 would be nice! We have a few VT320s in the museum but not so many VT100s but when the system goes on display we will as you suggest probably provide it with a nice VT100
Y'all have heard of 'write-protected' storage. Well, a 'head crash' gives you *read*- protected storage on those platters 🤕 I wonder if there was DEC equivalent of 'Norton Utilities' back then to mitigate those situations to *try* and rescue whatever remained on the platters. 3600rpm = 60rps which equates to a 'degree' sector read latency of 16.67ms if my maths & thinking is correct.
Unfortunately in this instance it was the servo head that crashed. It was a scratch disk in any case so had no data of value on there. In the field in the 1980s there were no such utilities to help rescue data. With some drives (RL02, Ampex etc), we simply had to clean the head and disk platter the best we could and hope the heads survived long enough to get a copy! No such luck with an RM03 though as they were much more critical - once a head crashed, the pack was condemned. The holy grail we are looking for is an RM03 alignment pack, of which there appear to be zero left in the world! I would be VERY happy to be proved wrong :-)
No offence but all you guys are "of an age" (as am I) What do we do when you (and I) are not here anymore? Do these things just go away then? That would be a shame, right? We'd like to enable historians way into the future to maintain these things. It seems like the next generation might be the absolute hardest? Are there 20 year olds interested in working on this stuff?
Wow as a young computer lover this is just impressive . I love it , one can't imagine it till one sees it. Thank you very much for providing this visual representation and of course for your restoration . Incredible !
Bring back memories of my DEC field service days. These mid-systems were everywhere and thus my service calls were anywhere. What a way to make a paycheck.
Those engineers earned a shed load. Especially with all the Pms.
Back in 1980 I worked as a computer repair technician and a lot of our customers ran PDP 11/34 and 11/70 systems. Once had to troubleshoot an 11/70 at a Navy facility in San Diego and spent 3 days isolating a stuck address bit which turned out to be a backplane wire wrap connection gone bad. These machines were monsters, but it was state of the art back then. I think my iPhone has way more processing power LOL, but the Massbus architecture of the 11/70 allowed it to support a ton of peripherals - disks, tapes, terminals - so you could support a medium size organization with the one CPU. Ah, heady stuff!
Great to see disk heads whacking around, really add something authentic to the video
I loved that version of the 11/70. From manufacturing to field service. The look was sleek. I always had a penchant for Dec blue as well. Wonderful restoration work guys.
Thanks Harold!
Fantastic work by some very dedicated individuals. Well done
My lab had over 30 PDP 11/xx including 45, 60, 70 & 80’s. The disks had 5 platters holding the RS11M OS and my designed OS. They were used in groups of 3 to 5 integrated computers with all connected through busses! Amazing machines. The front panel was octal, but internally it was hexadecimal!
Great work, guys! It is nice to see the PDP-11 and RSTS running. The first computer I used was a PDP-11/20 in 1973, then a PDP-11/50 for several years. For nostalgia's sake, it would be nice if you could get a DECtape unit (TU55 or TU56) and a paper tape reader/punch (PC05).
Thanks for sharing… What a great project … and video 👍 All the best from Denmark, Per
Brilliant work! I didn't get to see these machines running live, but I'm really fascinated by them due to the influence of Unix (FreeBSD/Linux).
Every time I go deeper into my research, I learn a lot from these technologies that are the basis of everything we use today!
Congratulations on the excellent work of preservation and restoration!
Best Regards,
Marcos Pereira
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
I studied PDP computer at DEC training center in Boston in 1989.
I was a repair technician and my company had PDP series and VAX series company.
Good sound, appreciated.
Thank you for the trip down memory lane
I used to service these computers in the early 80's and had a lot of fun doing it. Give me a PDP over a PC any day :-)
Your tape drive was a TK-90 I believe and was manufactured in Springfield, Mass before 1993. Probably between 90-93. In 93 as part as the big sell off, the Springfield facility was shut down. They produced all the tape drives, TE16, TU77-78 for DEC and also produced the first solid state HD, ESE20 as well as other smaller HD's. They had the largest clean room east of the Mississippi in the early 90's. I know, because I worked there and was outsourced in 1993 after 16 years with the company.
We got to play around a lot with equipment and I had a system running RSTS of 100 users on a PDP 11/34 with 100k of memory. Yes, that is 100k of memory. Of course, no graphics but still 100k to run the OS. Had 3 RK05's to boot from. Later, moved up to a micro VAX that by then supported 16 bit graphics. Woo-hoo. That was amazing. Brings back a lot of memories.
When I was a kid in the 70's and 80's our school had a PDP-11 to handle their office applications. I remember seeing it when waiting to go to the principals office for some kind of grade school shenanigan's. Many many decades later I worked with MicroVAXs' that served as controllers on a particle accelerator. In fact the custom Q-bus cards from a PDP-11 were moved to a microVAX(sadly I don't remember the model numbers) while I was there.
Cheers!
I never worked with a PDP-11, but did work with a Data General Eclispe S/130, which I think is in the same class.
I still dream about the work I did over 40 years ago.
Sean, the likes of us are on the way out, eyes and all...
But I think we may have had the best of it.
Absolutely brilliant Sean!
I love those rocker switches!
such a well made video, you’re doing a fantastic job of these
Reminds me of a firm called ADS based in Oxford St, London in the mid-80s that had one of these. They ran computer training courses and used their own version of COBOL for writing programs for various commercial applications.
Thank you sir,
I'm from India.
I love these old PDP machines. When I was in the Navy, we had PDP1170 that ran message processing applications. It ran using RSX11. Amazing machines of their time. Loved working with them. Required more hands on.
Love these big iron machines!
Great job, so many memories
Programmed the PDP 11 at a bank in Dallas. Lovely. I loved the PDP 11 interface. Never liked the IBM 370 JCL.
Great job guys, took me back to Barclay Road and Millshaw Park :-)
Mike - good to see that you are still with us. Barclay Road - I just fixed H7xx power supplies & Drico printers - you gave me no-end of help there. Fish 'n chips in overtime. Millshaw Park was the start of my computer career - MK3 vdu, SMD drives, 11/70, 11/44 (after a course with DEC in Reading), VAX 11/780 to start with . Then to the Glass Palace. I have you, Brian Lindley and others on my SYSTIME dvd! Great memories.
PDP11 was my introduction to computing at college.
Absolutely amazing thank you everyone and well done keeping this lovely computer going. I bet there is a lot of Tea drunk whilst fettling this beast. I am so jealous, I would love to work at the NMOC but I live on the Isle of Man. Ah well I will visit again soon and look forward to seeing this in operation. Thanks :)
I need to see Unix V7 running there
Supported PDP 11/70 systems in San Francisco from 1975-1979 and then in Silicon Valley from 1981-1985.
Only thing missing really were proper 6250-density old-school tape drives ! 🙂
We had CDC 9766 300MB removable disk drives attached to our PDP-11/70.
We had an 11/23 and an 11/73 with RSTS 90 at college.... but neither of ours had a hardware front-panel.... just before I started college, they got rid of their Data General Nova which was bedecked by blinkenlichts... I feel I was cheated. :( ;)
Oh, incidentally I can be so sure of the RSTS version, 'cus I've got a printout to hand on my desk. ??????????
That VT-320 is way to modern to be authentic ;) Needs a nice VT-100.
VT100 would be nice! We have a few VT320s in the museum but not so many VT100s but when the system goes on display we will as you suggest probably provide it with a nice VT100
This machine belonged to a computer called NETREACH that stored it on HMS-PRESIDENT (1918) and I used to be a member, back in the 1990's
WOW much newer version, the PDP 11/70's worked on when in teh Aerospace field was black/Purple and Disk drives big a washing machines
We used RSX11M+ on our PDP's at Land Rover.
Really cool. What is the clock frequency of the CPU?
We'll try and get one of the team to answer your question.
Hi Doron - it runs at around 5MHz
Y'all have heard of 'write-protected' storage. Well, a 'head crash' gives you *read*- protected storage on those platters 🤕
I wonder if there was DEC equivalent of 'Norton Utilities' back then to mitigate those situations to *try* and rescue whatever remained on the platters.
3600rpm = 60rps which equates to a 'degree' sector read latency of 16.67ms if my maths & thinking is correct.
Unfortunately in this instance it was the servo head that crashed. It was a scratch disk in any case so had no data of value on there. In the field in the 1980s there were no such utilities to help rescue data. With some drives (RL02, Ampex etc), we simply had to clean the head and disk platter the best we could and hope the heads survived long enough to get a copy! No such luck with an RM03 though as they were much more critical - once a head crashed, the pack was condemned. The holy grail we are looking for is an RM03 alignment pack, of which there appear to be zero left in the world! I would be VERY happy to be proved wrong :-)
Where did you get rsts10 from?
.I used to be a pdp 11/70 operator. Remember backing up the wrong way. Wiped out a companies entire days work. Remember performing many Sysgens.
It would have been nice to see a close up of the screen.
Will see what we can do the next time we are down there Steve
RSTS resource sharing time sharing, if memory serves.
Rsts/e
13:49 Robert Plant!
@0:37 pci express x100
Macquarie University Fortran 77 Computing 101 PDP11 1984 …
No offence but all you guys are "of an age" (as am I)
What do we do when you (and I) are not here anymore? Do these things just go away then? That would be a shame, right? We'd like to enable historians way into the future to maintain these things.
It seems like the next generation might be the absolute hardest? Are there 20 year olds interested in working on this stuff?