Exploring SKALA: Chernobyl Reactor Control Computer

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @ChernobylFamily
    @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +9

    SKALA POSTERS ARE NOW AVAILABLE! Order here: ruclips.net/user/postUgkxzxTC5WABX-371XwLcHOEMcyNVBioXVA6

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue 11 месяцев назад

      but it lets the reactor explode so um no not in a million years.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  11 месяцев назад

      To be accurate, the machine had nothing to do with the explosion at all.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue 11 месяцев назад

      @@ChernobylFamily oh yes it did

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  11 месяцев назад +2

      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue proofs? IAEA has a different opinion. Read INSAG-7 report. Sorry: I prefer to operate with the expert-level data to make conclusions; and operation of the computer system was reconstructed up to each second. There were no flaws in it; the flaws were in totally different things. ;)

    • @AndrewHillis_2024
      @AndrewHillis_2024 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ChernobylFamily SO Was The CHERNOBYL DISASTER Caused By COMPUTER Or HUMAN FAILURE Or A COMBINATION Of BOTH ? ? ?🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @michaeljones6256
    @michaeljones6256 Год назад +571

    The computer resource limitations you discussed are not only in the Chernobyl Skala system but also in the USA 3 mile island reactor installation. It was noted that the priority data output from the computer was lagging very far behind during the melt down emergency. I am thankful for the chance to see this equipment which may have been lost to the scrap yard without your intervention.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +33

      Thank you for those details!

    • @gabbyn978
      @gabbyn978 Год назад +50

      I guess, the measurement reports came in so fast that the computer could not handle it in real time.
      Real Time operation was a big thing in the 1980ies; and not many computers could do it. Seeing it from today, these 'high tech' machines were slugs, but there was no better technology available, because it had not yet been developed. Don't assume that a Commondore 64 could have been able to do it. A memory of 64 kilobyte of RAM would be nice; but processing the reports of 1661 channels in real time was beyond its capacity.
      Also, all of the east European countries were suffering from a boycott, they could not order western computers, as they were categorized as potentially useable for weaponry; so they had to construct their own computers. They even had to develop their own systems. If you think of that... they sent their Soiuz rockets into space with that technology.

    • @andrewallen9993
      @andrewallen9993 Год назад +25

      The computers of the age like the HP 2100 using the Real Time Environment software could process the data fast enough but the Teletype HMI device couldn't keep up so the output was stored in memory to be slowly printed out by the teletypes.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +32

      @@gabbyn978 check the part of the video closer to the end; this is what I meant - signals of SUZ were bufferized and there is a chance at some point during 10-15 seconds after reactor 4 explosion that buffer got an overflow. We will make a separate episode on this.

    • @elkiton
      @elkiton Год назад +27

      Hi, I was a tech salesman with DEC in the seventies. One of my clients took me on a tour of a UK powerplant. I was intrigued by the use of Deva drum storage devices, they being long out of fashion, and a couple of minicomputers from a competitor which seemed a strange configuration. Getting the gen on them it seemed they were used for some tests in the installation and test phase, but we're so good at monitoring the operation they were left embedded in the final installation and could not be removed once the plant went live. One guy had a single job, sourcing spares and keeping the drums operational.... After that tour I swore I would not go within 20 miles of that plant, and never did.

  • @Skaldewolf
    @Skaldewolf Год назад +65

    all these hand-soldered elements, the ton of wire-wrapping and these wonderful ferrite-core memory-elements. The amount of work that must have gone into this system is staggering.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +9

      And imagine to manage this... or UPGRADE this, when they had to connect DIIS...

    • @neilbarnett3046
      @neilbarnett3046 Месяц назад +2

      And into almost any 1950s to 1970s computer, single-sided circuit boards, hand-wired backplanes, valves, discrete transistors and other components... the effort to just achieve a small outcome by modern standards.
      I read in the late 1970s about a company that replaced their old valve computer (power consumption: 3kW for the high tension supply, 4kW for the valve heaters, and 3kW for the fans)... with a Commodore PET 32.

    • @stevengill1736
      @stevengill1736 Месяц назад

      ...and trying to do it in the utmost secrecy, wow....

  • @jhoughjr1
    @jhoughjr1 Год назад +32

    This is a viral historical treasure to preserve as much as possible.

  • @ayitsyaboi
    @ayitsyaboi Год назад +168

    This is insanely cool, thank you. Even with my understanding of computers and programming it still blows my mind that people figured all of this out with the limited technology they had. Both hardware and software.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +2

      Thank you!

    • @jeremyphilipjohnpenrice462
      @jeremyphilipjohnpenrice462 Год назад +4

      This is truely the salient point as to why the unmonitored unmoderated section brlow thd fuel rods reach where the Reactors core started thd runnaway condition which were initiated with ghe pushing of the AZ5 button.
      For thise 8 seconds every was completely unmonitored to the actual conditions which caused the massive nuclear explosion.
      Jeremy Penrice.
      Electrical & Instrumentation Engineer.

    • @mrcontroversy222
      @mrcontroversy222 Год назад +2

      im building a decent sized shope...i have a room for my pc gaming...one wall will be OLD monitors and computer interfaces! jesus i made need a video of the shit ive collected

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +2

      DO IT!

  • @thiagozanolomainente76
    @thiagozanolomainente76 Год назад +458

    This video is amazing and deserves a million views🎉

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +43

      Frankly, it took us three weeks of drawing, animating and editing non-stop, so really, really hope for this!

    • @samjanssens1509
      @samjanssens1509 Год назад +13

      no, atleast 2 million, more than the fake vid

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +27

      @@samjanssens1509 thank you. In fact, as more people watch, as more it motivates us for new epic stuff to make. Greetings from Ukraine!

    • @minty_Joe
      @minty_Joe Год назад +11

      @@ChernobylFamily Outstanding job on the videos. Thank you so much! I hope all is well and safe during these difficult times. God bless you and peace be with you. Love from United States of America! Glory to Ukraine! Glory to the Heroes! 💙💛🌻💪☮

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +16

      Glory to heroes!

  • @DreamGrandDragon
    @DreamGrandDragon Год назад +70

    I’ve been following the Chernobyl for disaster for years. Thank you for giving me more insight on how this system and how everything works. Always has been a curious fascination. I’m glad I found this channel.❤

  • @mikebailey783
    @mikebailey783 Год назад +104

    This is brilliant; one of the most captivating documentaries I've seen in a while. Superb use of archive photography, and great to see such effort put into the illustrations. And thank you for going into such detail on the various processes and conventions involved.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +3

      Thank you!

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Год назад +2

      _"thank you for going into such detail"_
      The more detail the better! It's one thing to see what a machine does but it's much more interesting to learn how it does it.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Very right

  • @TheSonicfrog
    @TheSonicfrog Год назад +9

    Well done! I have an affinity for old computers, when I was in the US Navy aboard the USS Jason AR8 (a repair ship) circa 1974 I was responsible for operating a Univac AN/UYK 5V computer, used primarily for tracking parts and work hours. Not a single IC anywhere, everything was transistor/diode logic, with about 4096 18-words of ferrite core memory. I/O was four tape drives, a teletype for a console, a huge chain driven printer, and an even bigger card reader/punch. Surprisingly, the system had a COBOL compiler, and I wrote a small program to accept punch cards and print out a list of everyone serving aboard.

  • @keeganplayz1875
    @keeganplayz1875 Год назад +53

    It's incredible how modern computers barely take up space, but 37 years ago they took up an entire room! SKALA was very powerful for It's time!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +9

      Especially if we pay attention to the fact it is a highly specialized machine, so not a computer in a general meaning.

    • @paulbrown3302
      @paulbrown3302 Год назад +3

      MS DOS had already released for PCs by this time computers were desktop

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      ....and what is wrong ?

    • @BlackEpyon
      @BlackEpyon 7 месяцев назад +6

      Actually, SKALA would have been well behind the technological curve by the time of the reactor #4 accident. Massive wire-wrapped TTL-based mainframes like this developed in the 60's were being phased out of service by the 80's, as the smaller and more power efficient MOS and CMOS based integrated circuits were becoming more and more reliable. At least in the west.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 7 месяцев назад

      @@BlackEpyon Soviets were able to develop good systems for their industry and power plants.
      Not able to develop consumer system only.

  • @Meshuggah27
    @Meshuggah27 Год назад +29

    Thank you so much for this video. My mind is absolutely melted. I am a Sysadmin, and the tech back then was insane! I cannot imagine the amount of engineering that had to go into this.

  • @JB52520
    @JB52520 Год назад +68

    Wow, that system has a strong creepy vibe to it (in a good way). The control rooms were part of the computers. The operators were integral parts of the system, enclosed within it, their minds filled with codes. It must have been an overwhelming experience.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +18

      It was. People who worked with this, told us, all this felt like a city, it was very special.

    • @vladislavstanimirovic9650
      @vladislavstanimirovic9650 Год назад +5

      I remember visiting my father's workplace, an analog telephone exchange that had a similar computer room, although much, much smaller, but similar in a way of having the tape reels, teletypes etc. Usually, around such machinery various stickers were placed with sort of short "reminders", and one of them said, "Remember, you are the brain of the machine". Your comment reminded me of that, it unlocked a 30yr old memory. 😁

    • @therandomytchannel4318
      @therandomytchannel4318 10 месяцев назад +2

      Akimov and everyone else in the room probably had to get special education to run these systems hey 🎉

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  10 месяцев назад +2

      @therandomytchannel4318 not probably, but definitely. As far I remember, it required 8 years of study.

  • @PonczekORIGINAL
    @PonczekORIGINAL Год назад +11

    You can't imagine how long i've been waiting for any sort of documentary on SKALA. Thank you!

  • @MarkMcCluney
    @MarkMcCluney Год назад +28

    That array of analogue gauges is extraordinary. Thanks for showing us Alex, this is a fabulous documentary, so fascinating and just brilliantly presented. Thanks to both of you for all the effort you put into this channel.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +5

      Thank you so much! We are thinking to get a couple of selsyns to make a demonstration of them in action by recreating one of those meters.

  • @mikolajkaraczyn6382
    @mikolajkaraczyn6382 Год назад +2

    Hi, really great video! Thanks for sharing with us this unique and rare informations. I would like to see continuation about this topic :)

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      This year it will come;) stay tuned :)

    • @mikolajkaraczyn6382
      @mikolajkaraczyn6382 Год назад +1

      @@ChernobylFamily great, I will (un)patiently wait for it! I'll check other your videos :)

  • @bassybossy
    @bassybossy Год назад +42

    Amazing view of the system and thank you for saving and explaining it. The disaster is an incredibly personal story for many that the hardware and software underlying it all is often overlooked. Looking forward for more on this!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +6

      Thank you! There is much to tell, and we will work on this...!

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Год назад +22

    You're going full-on CuriousMarc here! What a magnificent system and video.
    And the comparison with the AGC DSKY is on spot here. Same thought crossed my mind. Speaking of the DSKY... just look at all these electroluminescent displays - another feature these systems had in common.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +8

      Well, frankly we don't follow CuriousMarc, but we believe he does some cool stuff :) as for displays... they are breathtaking in action, and they arr so huge...

    • @senilyDeluxe
      @senilyDeluxe Год назад +3

      @@ChernobylFamily You sure you aren't CuriousMarc's long lost twin brother? :-)

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Bhahaha that start to sound like an Indian movie :)

    • @mikolasstrajt3874
      @mikolasstrajt3874 Год назад +2

      CuriousMarc literally repairs Apollo computers with his friends. This is very similar thing.

    • @BlackEpyon
      @BlackEpyon 7 месяцев назад +2

      CuriousMarc and his group have gotten into restoration of some Soviet-era space hardware, and he's familiar with operating and restoring big TTL-based mainframes like the IBM System 360, 308x series, etc, so there's a lot of collaboration potential.

  • @jakemeyer8188
    @jakemeyer8188 Год назад +10

    My wife grew up in Slavutych. Her mom was one of those engineers at Chornobyl, but she got there in 1988; 2 years after the accident. She worked with the remaining operational reactors (obviously).
    I myself am OBSESSED with retro computing such as this, and especially the reactor computers of the era. I'm dying to create my own replica reactor control room...
    Edit: if it wasn't clear, this video is AWESOME. MASSIVE thank you for this!!!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Based on what you told, we believe you will like what will come next...) Thank you!

    • @williamrekow7513
      @williamrekow7513 Год назад +1

      I hope the people there are well, or that they have gotten somewhere safe.

  • @lincolnfirmo8221
    @lincolnfirmo8221 Год назад +112

    Thanks for your dedication and work in sharing this precious information with the world! Greetings from Brazil.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +6

      Thank you! Glad that you liked!

    • @vladimus9749
      @vladimus9749 Год назад +5

      Seriously. I've always wondered what role the computer had in the disaster. Never been able to find much until now.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +3

      So happy it was helpful!

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Год назад +3

      @@vladimus9749 Seems like it did its job very well. Without the telemetry it recorded it would have been much harder to determine exactly what happened and why.

    • @johnnyzippo7109
      @johnnyzippo7109 Год назад +2

      I clicked subscribe , was surprised I wasn’t already , having watched several of your offerings multiple times . Thank you again , I will join the Patreon at end of month.

  • @phildem414
    @phildem414 Год назад +21

    Great video! I was searching for info about SKALA for years. Here in france, Tchernobyl was a tragedy that marked everybody. The RBMK reactors are prety well known and understood but cold war, USSR computers remain misterious.
    I went to the science museum in London ans they a stunning BESMM6, impressive machine for sure.

  • @NickFizzard
    @NickFizzard Год назад +8

    This video HAS to blow up. The immense amount of knowledge, research, and incredible amount of skill to apply here has absolutely paid off. This is HISTORY you're making, man!! You earned another subscription! 😄👍❤️🇺🇦

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it! Well, it took quite a time to make it, it is true :)

  • @bradmiley
    @bradmiley Год назад +4

    Дякую за це фантастичне відео. Я був зачарований Чорнобилем з часів катастрофи, яка сталася, коли мені було 16 років, і здачі важливих іспитів. Я знав, що радіація досягла моєї країни, і що чудове весняне повітря, яким я дихав, також було (трохи) радіоактивним.
    I am from the UK, and have always wanted to visit the reactor, Pripyat, and the DUGA installation, but im disabled now, and I dont think I could handle all the walking!!
    I send you Blessings and Love from the Northern UK, to you and your family. Stay safe!. Slava Ukraine! 🇺🇦 ❤️

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Thank you so much, my friend, it is so valuable for us! Take care and get ready for new videos that will tell even more secret stories! Glory to heroes!

    • @bradmiley
      @bradmiley Год назад

      @@ChernobylFamily Thank *you*! That was an awesome video - truly. I have never seen SKALA, only heard about it. Your video explained in great detail this mysterious system. It's almost unbelievable, a computer so tiny (memory/processor speed) could run a complex nuclear reactor. But they can only do what *humans* tell them, and the experiments conducted in late April 1986 pushed *everything* beyond their limits.
      A friend of mine, in 2007, made a music album (with a few videos) about the disaster, and gave everything (documents, recording diaries, video and music masters) to a Chernobyl children's charity. It was released at the date and time of the disaster in 2007 - the idea was, anyone born then would have reached the age of 21 (a milestone in some European/Western countries). He gave them full permission to do whatever they wanted with the album. I think there are a couple of music videos on RUclips to this day.
      Sorry for rambling! I was gifted a copy of the album so I tend to think of it, the music in my mind, when I talk about April 1986.
      Stay well my friend, love from Northern UK ❤️🇺🇦❤️🇺🇦
      Героям слава.
      Слава Захисникам.
      Слава Народу.
      Слава Україні!! 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you for sharing all this. It is... so touching.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Do you have a link to or a name of the album?

  • @yagomg7790
    @yagomg7790 Год назад +3

    I remember reading about SKALA a few years ago (when my chernobyl obssesion). I was bummed by the low amount of information about the computer. This video really made my day if not my week.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      We are so happy to hear this...! Stay tuned, more to come!

  • @ZakHooiTM
    @ZakHooiTM Год назад +81

    This is beyond cool, always wondered what computer system was behind chernobyl.
    Will there be any chance that the Tapes and drives that still exist to be read it and archived?
    Maybe some day the SKALA architecture / system can be reverse engineered and be emulated with the original software
    Proud to be a patreon member for this channel

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +29

      They stand and do exist. Well, will suggest that idea.

    • @TheErilaz
      @TheErilaz Год назад

      ​@@ChernobylFamilyMaybe it could be posted on github?

    • @jasonmurawski5877
      @jasonmurawski5877 Год назад +8

      They may be standard 8 track tapes. They look like rebranded IBM compatible equipment, and in that case the computer history museum has an IBM 1404 that can read the tapes and send it to a modern computer

    • @JCarey1988
      @JCarey1988 Год назад +6

      I second the request for reading and preserving any tapes!@@ChernobylFamily

    • @revsnowfox5798
      @revsnowfox5798 Год назад +1

      Eh, it was an industrial control system, I doubt there's much value in extracting the raw numbers from those tapes. The same kind of applies the emulating the SKALA, it's not an ordinary "retrocomputer", it's an automation and control system for a nuclear power plant, how do you emulate it?

  • @rosco4659
    @rosco4659 4 дня назад +2

    This has got to be one of the best most underrated channels for one of my favourite subjects. You go into a very good level of detail. I seem to remember in the reactor halls the had an intermittent sound playing constantly as a sign of safe radiation levels and believed it went off in the event of a problem. I've really been able to find any information on this as it would be good to try and get some diagrams and try to build the sounder device. Thanks for a great video and greetings from the UK.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  4 дня назад +1

      Thank you, seriously. This video is old, we'd make it much better now, but... thank you!

  • @teatimee
    @teatimee Год назад +21

    This was really fascinating and well made. I hope that lots of other people get to see your work.

  • @ScarlettStunningSpace
    @ScarlettStunningSpace Год назад +3

    It's so cool they decided to save it. I've always wanted an explanation of infrastructure like this because most of it is very vague and doesn't get into how it really works. This video deserves so many more views!!

  • @SmokinGoodd420
    @SmokinGoodd420 Год назад +4

    History should never be forgotten. Saw this on YT main page recommends . Well done !

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you! Check our previous episodes, and if you have a possibility, join us on Patreon - there is 10x more interesting stuff on Chernobyl and its amazing tech.

  • @keith_5584
    @keith_5584 Год назад +6

    Thank you for commissioning and documenting this for us. Seems very well sculpted for an early age computer!

  • @robertwatsonbath
    @robertwatsonbath Год назад +35

    This is really interesting! So SKALA was much more than a computer solving complex reactivity equations but also an enormous real-time data acquisition system too - measuring and logging everything as well as looking for anomalies from "normal" operations?

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +9

      Yes, it is a very good and correct definition you proposed. Actually, it comes from the meaning of its name - "the system of control and automatization".

    • @AmauryJacquot
      @AmauryJacquot Год назад +10

      and they did all that with 20kB of ram...
      current systems are so much bloated...

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +8

      200, as those 20 were is in octal system.

    • @filipmecir262
      @filipmecir262 Год назад +1

      @@ChernobylFamily Still crazy - PLC I use for home automation has 20 MB RAM... Thanks for this video.

    • @GuyFromJupiter
      @GuyFromJupiter Год назад +2

      Like modern day SCADA

  • @anomalousbob9361
    @anomalousbob9361 Год назад +1

    This video is perhaps one of the greatest documenting videos I've seen on old computers! I genuinely loved every single moment; congratulations for such a beautiful production!

  • @costindan6180
    @costindan6180 Год назад +4

    Greetings from Romania, amazing video, you pieced together so much info about this system… great work, we’re all grateful. Thank you!

  • @JapanPop
    @JapanPop Год назад +18

    I wish I could give 100 likes. It was so touching to hear about Mrs. Pripyat feelings. You impress me in keeping on making good videos like this during more conflict. Ukrainian people must be very tough. Your people have overcome so much in the past 100 years.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +7

      After all, our research is a piece of that "normal" that keeps us sane.

  • @ClassicalRips
    @ClassicalRips Год назад +15

    Thank you so much for making this video! For decades I ran in to the same issue that you did, no resources I could find ever described the SKALA system at all; documenting industrial control systems like this is very important to retro computing history and is a very overlooked sector for computer historians!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +2

      Glad we could help! But, we are going to continue.

  • @Jappmannen
    @Jappmannen Год назад +4

    As a former instrumentation engineer at a ASEA ATOM BWR reactor this is impressing as hell!
    Especially if you think about that the computer must handle over 1600 analog channels at the same time (probably even more if you count in such parameters like steam and feedwater temperatures, steam pressure, feedwater flow and probably some data from the turbine). And then I haven't even mentioned that RBMK reactors have that possitive feedback loops which means that the control rods must be actively controlled all the same time in order for the reactor to maintain a consistent power level.

  • @djdomi6583
    @djdomi6583 Год назад +6

    Excellent video! I was always interested in SKALA and how it worked. Thanks for the video! :)

  • @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
    @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars Год назад +2

    What a FASCINATING video! This is an area of the subject that really doesn't get the attention it deserves. You explain it well for an old tart like me who doesn't really understand computers. However, when you mentioned the request system I also started thinking about Apollo. I do hope you do more of these. Thanks for sharing your hard work!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it! There will be much more here, stay tuned!

  • @bobbysenterprises3220
    @bobbysenterprises3220 Год назад +8

    First video I've seen of yours. This was absolutely mind blowing. Thank you. I would love more on these details you eluded to.very well done and nicely paced with great footage and explanations

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      We are very happy that you liked...! Wait for more!

  • @waywardtraveler9896
    @waywardtraveler9896 8 месяцев назад +2

    I’ve watched hundreds of videos on Chernobyl and never heard of this. Great job very informative

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  7 месяцев назад

      Thank you! Check our newer episodes as well!

  • @eduardocarvalho1547
    @eduardocarvalho1547 Год назад +7

    Thanks! I've been waiting for a detailed video about the Skala computer for years. I hope in the future you make more videos about Skala and also the other less known auxiliary systems of the NPP.

  • @DerTyrann1984
    @DerTyrann1984 6 месяцев назад

    Great video. This computer was amazing, it reminded me when I flew the Embraer 190 where everything is also controlled by the computers, with self tests, failure detection, dual channels that switch automatically.
    All you have in the cockpit is a digital interface.

  • @klaas-janrozema5396
    @klaas-janrozema5396 Год назад +3

    Amazing content. Thank you very much for this unique and almost forgotten story. For me as a computer engineer it is mind blowing what they did with available computer hardware back then. The Chernobyl story is engraved in our collective memory, we'll never forget.

  • @cameronmoylan712
    @cameronmoylan712 7 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent move stepping in to save the system. Every person has the power to do something when they notice a bad decision is about to be made.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  7 месяцев назад

      Well, I do not overestimate my contribution, but that was the case of being in the right place at a right time.

  • @SuperBicycleRepairMan
    @SuperBicycleRepairMan Год назад +3

    Thanks for the detailed and considered look at the RBMK control system. Plus all the work that you have put in. All the best with your future projects :).

  • @nojbik
    @nojbik Год назад +18

    Good job again Alex.Some people thinks that USSR computers were piece of crap, but in fakt they were working well and reliable for their purpose. Thank You for all Your reviews

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +10

      They were a piece of crap with some brilliant exceptions :)

    • @vitalyl1327
      @vitalyl1327 Год назад +2

      @@ChernobylFamily have you seen ЦВК, by any chance?

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Mmm... i am afraid I need a hint

    • @vitalyl1327
      @vitalyl1327 Год назад +3

      @@ChernobylFamily another Soviet computer from that era, slightly newer than SKALA (1970, AFAIR), built using ferrite core memory and discrete ICs. It's still deployed in the S-300 complexes. Was quite a fascinating design for its time - very RISC-like architecture with quite a deep pipeline, SMP with hot-swap for CPUs, also extensive self-testing features like in SKALA. It's sad that only military, nuclear and aerospace applications got unique Soviet designs while civilians had to cope with poorly copied western computers...

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      @vitalyl1327 unfortunately, this one I did not have a chance to see, but it sounds impressive.

  • @joshflugel
    @joshflugel Год назад +2

    Magnificent video for the tech geek community. Mad respect for the scientists and engineer that created these machines in those old days.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you! And if you would only hear with what respect they still talk about it!

  • @ColoradoDualSport
    @ColoradoDualSport Год назад

    This is absolutely fascinating! As an IT professional that started in the late 1990s it's amazing what they were able to do with such limited hardware resources. Thank you for doing the research and presenting this so well. Great work!

  • @germancaperarojas4023
    @germancaperarojas4023 Год назад +5

    Man. What a gem! Greetings from the other part of the world. This is amazing. What a nice retrocomputer dive into how the USSR created their first main frames and control systems.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Thank you! Greetings from Ukraine! Check our previous videos and stay tuned for new :)

  • @alexzaslavskis4623
    @alexzaslavskis4623 Год назад +2

    Really great work , looking forward for other videos. Many thanks.
    Sveiciens no Latvijas 🇱🇻

  • @ATTomMan
    @ATTomMan Год назад +5

    Thank you guys, incredible stuff, such rare info. Had no clue, why there such small number of subscribers on this channel. Thank you for so detailed review of many types of equipment.
    Truly rare things you have access to. I`ll use some references from cannel, for props modelling, in future METRO game series. Greetings from Kyiv.

  • @hudsonsantos8271
    @hudsonsantos8271 Год назад +1

    RBMK are the most powerful reactors ever! The technology to control it is one of the most complex things I ever see. Was very nice to know how this things works in detail, even to compare with other control systems and learned how to do a better system for future applications.
    Thanks for sharing this with us, it's a service to mankind.

  • @Takyodor2
    @Takyodor2 Год назад +3

    I had no idea that I needed this in my life, but now I'm hooked!
    Super interesting information, and very well put together, thank you for making this (and saving the computer).

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Glad that you liked! There will be much, much more content like this - and in meanwhile, check our previous episodes!

  • @computerb0y27
    @computerb0y27 Год назад +1

    staggering amount of patience required in this era. stunning work, mad respect ☺️

  • @lucasrem
    @lucasrem Год назад +4

    Great Video !
    I was asking Russian friends for years to do this, but everyone did say, then i will be arrested as a spy.
    But there are people that did restore the SKALA systems, and specially the SKALA at Chernobyl !
    Great uploads.

  • @wysoft
    @wysoft Год назад +2

    Great video. I work with modern marine automation systems as part of my job. I've always had a fascination with the SKALA system since learning of its existence, but there was almost no information out there about it, how it worked, or how extensive it was.
    Considering how far Soviet computing technology lagged behind the west, this was a surprisingly capable and extensive system that monitored probably thousands of data points with relatively little computing power.
    It's also cool to see some things that haven't changed all that much - e.g. the operator station at 11:40 for reading automation tag values is a concept that really hasn't changed.
    Great job in documenting and helping to save an interesting piece of computing and industrial automation history

  • @youtubasoarus
    @youtubasoarus Год назад +2

    Awesome video! Love to see how these old machines worked. The complexity is mind boggling. Thank you for making this and your hard work to research it.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Get ready for much, much more!

    • @youtubasoarus
      @youtubasoarus Год назад +1

      @@ChernobylFamily I can't wait! This is fascinating and exciting!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      For now, check previous episodes, some are pretty special :)

  • @Nubbe999
    @Nubbe999 Год назад +2

    Programing a nuclear reactor by doing holes on paper. Somehow it does not feel right. But it worked.
    It was a very smart move to save the computer, I think most things connected to Chernobyl and the surrounding area are of interest for Tourists.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Well, punch tape was a common media back in its times - after all, these are just bits of information. I am more fascinated how compact and well-written the programs had to be.
      Thank you! The place is very important to world history, far beyond just in a form oftourism (though for tourists itnis attactive, of course, too)

  • @GenerationAI2024
    @GenerationAI2024 Год назад +5

    Thank you so much for this in depth info on this beautiful computer. Just love those old proprietary computers :)

  • @kermitinmountain6371
    @kermitinmountain6371 Год назад

    As a hearing Impaired podcast viewer, I am blown away by your commentary, I wasn't aware of the computer systems and I like to thank you for being informal giving the documentary. This is a absolutely genuine, especially the color tags with number and switches. I would love to have it as a souvenir. This is true when I was a teenager back in the 80's. My Great-grandfather was born in countryside outside of Odessa, when Ukraine was under Soviet rules. We are Germany-Russian Descendants.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      We have a few buttons which are identical to those used on control rods control panel (the round assembly near AZ switches). Just they are not engraved because we bought them at kyiv radiomarket. If you wish to have - write us.

  • @telumatramenti7250
    @telumatramenti7250 Год назад +5

    "Skala" (plural: "Skaly" - stress on A)means more in Russian than "rock". Original semantics of the word aside modern use specifically denotes the upper part of tall mountains that is bare rock. The word is never used to refer to individual rocks, for example - a boulder that needs to be moved when clearing a road or a rock you could pick up with your hands. The word's frequent poetic use is possibly the main reason why they decided to stick with that abbreviation. I can see that NASA's taste for abbreviations was certainly shared by the Soviet programmers. This is certainly a very unusual, high value educational video. I thought SKALA was forever lost to history by now. My first ambient music track "Deus Ex Machina" was dedicated to this ancient apparatus ☺The scifi part of me envisions a future museum of computers where all of world's important and iconic historical computers, with "Enigma" and Turing's computer which cracked it, Apollo's computers, 1980-s Soviet ЭВМ and so on. And of course, - this amazing beast.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Thank you for sharing! Do you have a link to your track?

  • @florianlacrampe4361
    @florianlacrampe4361 Год назад +2

    Really amazing work ! Thank you for all !
    SKALA design is very elegant :)
    Best greets from France

  • @0xbenedikt
    @0xbenedikt Год назад +25

    Fascinating. I never really looked much into this and didn't expect that they actually had such a complex DAQ and control system.
    I thought this was all done by hand with manual gauges and some discrete analog electronics.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +7

      So much still to discover. We personally, although knew it is far more than a computer, did not expect it is THAT big in its role.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Год назад +2

      @@ChernobylFamily And all that in 20k words. A lot of people today don't realize just how much one can do with that. I'm really interested in learning more about the V-3M's architecture (CPU, buses, etc.); maybe a follow-up video?
      Edit: That's 20k addresses of 24-bit words. Still impressive though.

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Год назад +2

      @@alexhajnal107 "A lot of people today don't realize just how much one can do with that." Its basically driving hardware, nowadays everything is emulated by software, and we have 50 years of layers on top of layers to make things super complex and use a lot of ram. That machine had none of that, just bare assembly code, you don't even need to have code to display things, there's actual physical display devices.
      The amount of things you can do with very little RAM when the hardware itself does the heavy lifting is amazing.

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Год назад

      I'm surprised that it did had a kernel/user division.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      I'll just add a correction, those are 20 octal KB, so roughly 200 in binary. It used 24-bit words.

  • @tamahagane1700
    @tamahagane1700 Год назад +2

    Absolutely stunning. Thank you for helping save this piece of history.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed it! And thanks for your warm words!

  • @techn1kal1ty
    @techn1kal1ty Год назад +5

    So they were essentially dual-core, each core having 20K cache and 8K shared RAM, with ECC? Controlling VMs via machine code, with hand-punched, punch-tape BIOS? These computers may be light-years behind modern specs and functionality, but way ahead of modern computers in charisma.

  • @TomasMisura
    @TomasMisura Год назад +1

    when I started my career in IT 25 years ago, I was working on something similar but definitely more advanced. we had been running local hospital's information system . it took another year when we switched into something much modern but we still kept it operational as the backup

  • @AndrewRump
    @AndrewRump Год назад +3

    The most amazing RUclips video I have seen in a very long time. A fantastic find and definitely something that needs to be stored for eternity - and your explanations just gave me so much new information about Chernobyl. keep up the great work.

  • @enoladeveu3653
    @enoladeveu3653 Год назад +3

    Wonderful video! Thank you very much. I've been waiting for it for a long time. 20K RAM, no CRT no keyboard, writing programs in machine language. That’s it. That's what real men do.

  • @michaelodendaal5776
    @michaelodendaal5776 Год назад +2

    That's amazing would have been top secret back in the day , good on ya for saving history

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you! Well, as you can see, details about it were in a public newspapers, but technical details for suren won't be public.

  • @krisztiangyarmati2144
    @krisztiangyarmati2144 Год назад +2

    Hello! I would really like a more detailed summary of the SKALA system, looking at the implementation of the connections, the communication between the individual units, and the software implementation. Go to these, or to any of them :)
    I really liked your video, thank you!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Thank you! We will make this as soon as we will be able - due to wаr it is not really possible, but hopefully things will change.

  • @leito1996
    @leito1996 Год назад +2

    I'm not much of charnobyl geek but I am stunned and applause work did here, good work! ❤

  • @flaviotrash9693
    @flaviotrash9693 Год назад +3

    I has been waiting a video like this. Thanks

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Glad that you liked! There will be much more about this equipment in the future...)

  • @danwhite3224
    @danwhite3224 Год назад +1

    Finally, someone documenting the SKALA system! I'm surprised nobody had done it sooner because it's such an interesting system, and I'm so so glad that it's being saved..

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      Well, I remember stepping for the first time in that room - "jeez, it is HUGE"..)

  • @SebastianGalletto
    @SebastianGalletto Год назад +3

    Another amazing video from you. It is great as a piece of Chornobyl history, and also as computer history.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you for these motivating words! Seriously, it is very important for us.

  • @F3Aer
    @F3Aer Год назад +1

    Thanks for the making of this video: it is incredibly interesting. Also, discovering, analizing and showing pics and video from that time demands a lot of time and work. Again, thank you very much for doing this!

  • @patrykx4577
    @patrykx4577 Год назад +3

    I also read almost anything what i could find avout chernobyl disaster. And cannot find any info about skala system in english speaking intetnet. Thanks a lot for this excellent presentation

  • @Trottelheimer
    @Trottelheimer Год назад +1

    Thank you for this fascinating insight into the control systems of the reactors! As a computer enthusiast and professional since the early 80s, and with an interest in the history of computers, this was right up my street - subscribed 👍

  • @leopiipponen7693
    @leopiipponen7693 Год назад +3

    Very intresting video complexity computer systems :)

  • @BartManNL
    @BartManNL Год назад +1

    I recently stumbled onto this channel and can only say it is AMAZING! Thank you for making these videos!

  • @mikefochtman7164
    @mikefochtman7164 Год назад +4

    Very interesting. I worked in US BWRs from the mid 80's. They had data gathering systems that tracked the power levels throughout the core. Like the RBMK, during refueling individual bundles were shuffled based on their previous exposure 'burn up'.
    Before this time, some plants just recorded the data on tapes and sent them to a vendor that would read/ analyze and project future thermal performance and 'fuel shuffles'.
    Yeah, those old 'band printers' were not particularly fast. Ours were 300 lpm (lines per minute) but the alarm typer was a simple dot matrix that was much slower.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you for sharing all these details.

    • @gregrudd6983
      @gregrudd6983 Год назад +2

      The move over to DEC VAX's for near real-time would have been a huge step forward.

  • @rahulsolorider9440
    @rahulsolorider9440 Месяц назад +2

    Wow beautiful creations

  • @AgentSmith911
    @AgentSmith911 Год назад +3

    Very impressive technology for such a long time ago!

  • @michaelmoser4537
    @michaelmoser4537 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great video! Also: SKALA was not based on ES EVM (soviet copy of IBM 360), this was not typical of soviet computer systems of that time. Also turns out that you absolutely needed this computer system for normal operation of the RBMK reactor, as RBMK had an unusually large positive void coefficient. RBMK doesn't keep water inside the reactor under pressure, now you end up with fewer water within the reactor, as the water evaporates. This creates temporary voids. Now water is also a neutron absorber, so that these voids are resulting in a stronger chain reaction and increasing the thermal output. Eventually the whole thing exploded...
    The book "Midnight in Chernobyl" by Adam Higginbotham mentions an accident at the first installation of the RBMK reactor in Leningrad:
    "On the night of November 30, 1975, just over a year after it had first reached full
    operating capacity, Unit One of the Leningrad nuclear power plant was being
    brought back online after scheduled maintenance when it began to run out of
    control. The AZ-5 emergency protection system was tripped, but before the chain
    reaction could be stopped, a partial meltdown occurred, destroying or damaging
    thirty-two fuel assemblies and releasing radiation into the atmosphere over the Gulf
    of Finland. It was the first major accident involving an RBMK reactor, and the
    Ministry of Medium Machine Building set up a commission to investigate what had
    gone wrong. Afterward, the official line was that a manufacturing defect had led to
    the destruction of a single fuel channel. But the commission knew otherwise: the
    accident was the result of the design faults inherent in the reactor and caused by an
    uncontrollable increase in the steam void coefficient.
    Sredmash suppressed the commission’s findings and covered up the accident. The
    operators of other RBMK plants were never informed of its true causes. Nevertheless,
    the commission made several important recommendations, to be applied to all
    RBMK-1000 reactors: develop new safety regulations to protect them in the event of
    coolant loss; analyze what would happen in the event of a sharp rise in steam in the
    core; and devise a faster-acting emergency protection system. Despite their apparent
    urgency, the reactor designers failed to act on a single one of these directives, and
    Moscow promptly ordered more of the reactors to be built. The day after the
    Leningrad meltdown, the Soviet Union’s Council of Ministers gave its final approval
    to construct a second pair of RBMK-1000 units in Chernobyl, expanding the
    station’s projected output to an impressive 4,000 megawatts"
    Interesting if SKALA was supposed to have fixed these inherent instabilities during low power loads, but no - it was only a monitoring and recommendation system that was not designed to control the reactor directly.

  • @fi11222
    @fi11222 Год назад +2

    Very cool documentary. Thanks a lot. Maybe you could think about a part 2 including more info about the H/W architecture of the SKALA and its monitor/OS. You made a comparison with the AGC. Did the SKALA also have a prioritization of tasks like the AGC did? Some remarks you made that measurements might be delayed waiting for a "processor window" seem to indicate that it did. How exactly did this task scheduler work?

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      A continuation will come, though that will take a lot of time in the current conditions. I'll check on your questions with engineers and come back.

  • @bhs128
    @bhs128 Год назад +1

    Wow- Thank you for your dedication and excellent work documenting Chernobyl. I'll also add to those asking/dreaming of seeing a full SKALA emulator some day!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you! While emilator does not look as a realistic task, we highly possibly will make a replica of a few consoles. And what is possible now - to preorder a damn awesome poster with SKALA outline (check patreon, for now it is only there)

  • @DKTAz00
    @DKTAz00 Год назад +3

    Very very cool, amazing how much space these things used to take up

  • @Bamieater
    @Bamieater Год назад +1

    Loved the documentary. Personally have a passion for technology, including historical technology. Mainstream documentaries typically don't show such a detailed level, and I really enjoyed you provided the high-level architecture diagrams. Allowing an engineering audience to grasp the technical concepts. In a pretty recent project, I used a line matrix printer for a real-time offline backup / archive. The transactional data needed to be available right away, on let's say a power loss, and the computers not being available.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      Thank you! There will be a continuation this December.

  • @AlyaraArati
    @AlyaraArati Год назад +2

    I think this is the first video of yours which I've seen. Bravo! There's a ton of stuff about computers that I don't understand, but this is fascinating nonetheless! My friend has been educating me about Unit 4, and I have to say, it's very interesting!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +2

      Unisual computers are just a part of the great story of Chornobyl - as unique conditions required unique solutions. Thank you! There is much that will come here, and about Unit IV as well :)

  • @bmstylee
    @bmstylee Год назад +2

    What is amazing is that at some point people knew what all those different buttons, switches, dials, and gauges meant.

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      It took a hell of years to study it. For VIUR seems to me around 7 years, but I might be wrong.

  • @ChernobylFamily
    @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +12

    After many questions received, we will make a series of Patreon posts with more details and bonus materials about SKALA and control room systems - you are welcome to join us! Link is in the description of the video.

    • @MegaWatt_Lab
      @MegaWatt_Lab Год назад +1

      А буде українська озвучка відео?

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      @@MegaWatt_Lab та от багато хто просить, але ми поки не знаємо, як це зробити по часовитратам. Це фактично означає зробити повністю нове відео кожного разу, ледь вдається поки це робити.

  • @IlyaSTM-uv5gy
    @IlyaSTM-uv5gy Год назад +1

    Большое тебе спасибо за сохранение ценной информации и интересную подачу!

  • @RobertEliason
    @RobertEliason Год назад +3

    I remember the Barsebäck NPP having a teletype based backup system back in the 80's when I interned there. Nothing as cool as the C64 I had at home :P

  • @OstlerDev
    @OstlerDev Год назад +1

    It is amazing to see this system preserved, THANK YOU for your work!! I found it highly interesting!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад

      I just want to underscore, that although our word had a weight, and likely was the final drop, the preservation is the decision of the amazing collective of the power plant. Those guys are awesome:)
      Thank you for your words! It is highly motivating!

  • @RyderUwU
    @RyderUwU Год назад +4

    I'd be cool to have a dump of all the alarm sounds and such, it's hard to find but honestly I find them cool.
    I'm kinda building a game around managing a reactor and this stuff always inspires me

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +2

      ....planned!

    • @RyderUwU
      @RyderUwU Год назад +1

      @@ChernobylFamily hell yeah!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +2

      We are going to buy a bunch of actual selsyns - exactly that type that is at the NPP, and do something cool, just saying:)

    • @RyderUwU
      @RyderUwU Год назад +2

      @@ChernobylFamily ooh already can't wait for the showcase if that's planned for it as well.
      If you don't have the hardware to test them who knows you could use an Arduino or maybe the RUclipsr curiousmarc knows something

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +4

      Curiousmarc, curiousmarc, curiousmarc...))) we have a few research institutes in contact, just saying;))))

  •  Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video! I was always curious about this computer ever since I heard the name "SKALA" in some Chernobyl Disaster documentary, but I could not find any information other than it being an "industrial process computer" wich didn't really tell me much. Never imagined I'd get such an in-depth look into how it worked! Fascinating stuff!

  • @Silanael
    @Silanael Год назад +5

    I was always wondered if that kind of signal CRT display actually existed or not. Thanks for clarifying that! Also, if you have any technical documents of SKALA, I'd be most interested in adding them to a Chernobyl-archive I'm building. Thanks for the great video!

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      With all wish, there are no and I'm afraid won't be so far.

  • @FancyP24
    @FancyP24 Год назад

    This is such a niche interest for so many people, and you just filled a void of knowledge that I didn't even know I had. Thank you for these videos, amazing graphics and explanations!

  • @YourHoss
    @YourHoss Год назад +3

    This is awesome, totally delivered on what I’ve been looking for from this channel! It would be awesome to preserve the software and maybe with the documentation someone could build an emulator for the machine code to run SKALA and let it live again. Let it be the core of a Chernobyl simulator and see how the computer would respond to different inputs and situations in the reactor. I’ve seen another Chernobyl reactor simulator before but I highly doubt it’s running the real skala code.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 Год назад

      The V-3M is an industrial variant of the M4-3M. This is a fully indigenous design using only locally-produced components. It uses 24-bit data and 30-bit program words (Harvard architecture). For more info search for "M4-3M control computer"; the computer-museum (ru) site has a nice overview of the design.
      ( Looks like my two previous posts were auto-deleted for containing a link. Don't even include a site name lest your post be banished. )

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +3

      Well, documentation for this is a half a ton of books, but at some point some pieces of it really can have a use. For now we are thinking to rebuild some parts, which can be interactive, e.g. a request device.

    • @blockstacker5614
      @blockstacker5614 Месяц назад

      I wonder how detailed a modern computer could simulate an RBMK reactor unit.

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 Год назад +1

    Excellent research and narration. I am a researcher myself and have studied Chernobyl since the actual event. This is an excellent documentary! The first I have seen about the computer.

  • @AjinkyaMahajan
    @AjinkyaMahajan Год назад +4

    Wolderful. Thanks for a great video !!
    I whish there were english documentation of skala Computer manuals and architecture so it can subsequently be emulated on an an FPGA !!
    Cheers

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +4

      Thank you! Well, we have serious doubts it is possible to emulate is on FPGA, as it was octal-based, not binary, and was heavy dependent on analog devices. BUT, we plan to recreate some devices that were parts of it - in action!

    • @_DSch
      @_DSch Год назад +2

      @@ChernobylFamily with enough engineering time (and people wanting to volunteer for that) it should be possible to make an emulator for the software, but that would require knowledge of the inner workings and extensive documentation (like for example how the processor works exactly)

    • @ChernobylFamily
      @ChernobylFamily  Год назад +1

      We will suggest the idea. The obstacle is the dаmn wаr.

  • @MrT79shakeshake
    @MrT79shakeshake Год назад +1

    Great Video, the sheer engineering that went into this is amazing, especially the monitoring system.