Heavy Duty Computing: Univac 1219 In Action

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  • Опубликовано: 20 апр 2024
  • How many times do I say "Wow!" during this video? Yea... this machine from 1969 is that awesome. Enjoy!
    Thanks to the Vintage Computer Federation - vcfed.org/
    InfoAge Science Museum - www.infoage.org/
    Join Team FranLab!!!! Become a patron and help support my RUclips Channel on Patreon: / frantone
    #franlab #computer #history
    - Music by Fran Blanche -
    Fran's Science Blog - www.frantone.com/designwriting...
    FranArt Website - www.contourcorsets.com
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Комментарии • 241

  • @michaelfrench3396
    @michaelfrench3396 Месяц назад +66

    Holy crap! Ever since I was a little kid I wanted to see one of these things actually work! I only saw them in a book. This! This is why I'm subscribed

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Месяц назад +11

      It's amazing that old machines like this were somehow saved... They aren't treated as anything special when their time is up and they get replaced for newer hardware, it's off to the scrap yard.
      I'd love to hear it's story to find out how it managed to escape being scrapped.

    • @compu85
      @compu85 Месяц назад +1

      This machine was at a university used to develop the software for similar units installed on ships to aim the big gun.

  • @bernielarrivee5448
    @bernielarrivee5448 Месяц назад +41

    I could almost smell the oil and feel the warm air coming off that last mechanical marvel.
    I didn't start using computers until around '85, but we were still using the same mechanical printers and tape machines.
    Ah, ancient memories...

  • @trainliker100
    @trainliker100 Месяц назад +42

    I was on the USS Norton Sound 1968-70, and they had a Mark 86 fire control system. (In fact, it was the ship it was originally tested on.) As I recall, it used a Univac 1219. That is actually the militarized designation. The civilian version was the 418-II. The 418-I was the first of the series with the "4" being for the 4-microsecond memory cycle and the "18" being for the 18-bit word. Later variants, like the 418-II were faster though so the "4" didn't represent the actual speed anymore. The first laser gyroscope was sea-tested on the Norton Sound, and I recall being told it also involved a 1219. It had to deal with the same issues of mechanical gyroscopes about the Earth actually being round and not flat. For example, if you circumnavigated the Earth, the gyroscope would think the ship's yaw had gone end over end.

  • @DavidJones-yl5iq
    @DavidJones-yl5iq Месяц назад +44

    Fascinating! This brings back great memories. I worked for Sperry Univac in the 1970 and early 80s as a test engineer. Our facility (Bristol Tn) built peripherals like printers , tape drives, and disc drives. It was the era just before the PC tsunami.

    • @geofftaylor8913
      @geofftaylor8913 Месяц назад +3

      Me too.

    • @MikeinVirginia1
      @MikeinVirginia1 Месяц назад

      I didn't know they had a facility in Bristol, TN. I worked in a Norton Telecom (now called Nortel) factory in Nashville in 1978. We made telephones, including the old carbon microphones. We also made the advanced SL-1 switching system. The factory closed a few years later as manufacturing was going "offshore."

  • @timothyp8947
    @timothyp8947 Месяц назад +19

    There’s something very special about these properly old computers - and it’s so good to see one actually still able to run.

    • @SAVikingSA
      @SAVikingSA Месяц назад +2

      what's really wild is it was only around 15 years from this being built to what we would consider a "modern" desktop PC

  • @jamesgibson3582
    @jamesgibson3582 Месяц назад +16

    As a kid in the early 70's my Dad would take me to their computer room at the office. He explained how they managed the parts inventory for a large earth moving company. Absolutely loved the sights, sounds, smells, temperatures and knowing that a couple of years earlier people landed on the moon and excited about what would be next. We eventually got a 300 baud modem.and I played (with miles amd miles of paper rolls) 'moon lander' ('landed like a piece of pocket gnur floating to the floor'...or some such phrase when you nailed it) and 'colossal cave' ( 'you are facing west') that they had programmed in. Great video Fran, ignited lots of memories.

    • @BixbyConsequence
      @BixbyConsequence Месяц назад +3

      "You are in a twisty little maze of tunnels, all alike". I loved that game.

  • @goobfilmcast4239
    @goobfilmcast4239 Месяц назад +17

    I was a US Navy Data Systems Technician (DS2) on the USS Forrestal (CV-59) and USS Dale (CG-19/ Terrier Missile platform) and these were the Computers and Periphs that ran the Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS) onboard. We did very little real troubleshooting... if the System "malfunctioned" while underway we became expert card swappers. We used to made keychains out of those small business card-sized circuit boards....if we couldn't repair them down to component-level at the test bench

  • @terryhair6434
    @terryhair6434 Месяц назад +5

    I was a Fire Control Technician aboard USS Sellers DDG-11. Worked in the missile computer room. We had these UNIVAC 1219's as our missile fire control computers. I worked on 2 of them for the four years I was aboard. Very reliable! We had a newer I/O console with cassette tapes for program loading so we did not have the large tape handlers shown here. A great piece of nostalgia for me! Thanks!

  • @rdwatson
    @rdwatson Месяц назад +11

    I love that everything slides or folds out for easy access to work on, or just admire. Great design for serviceability.

    • @alexanderwhite8320
      @alexanderwhite8320 Месяц назад

      Our smartphones with glued batteries have gone far way since then...

  • @trainliker100
    @trainliker100 Месяц назад +10

    Now, imagine a VACUUM TUBE computer of more or less this scale. At Californite Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, CA, they had an old Burroughs vacuum tube computer. It filled a room. The power supplies involved seven 11 KVA transformers as I recall. And it had a big memory drum slightly smaller than a 55-gallon drum. The "floating point" unit alone must have had 50 to 100 plug in units, each with four tubes. When I was a student there, I had a part time job in the department that had it and one summer my job was disassembling it for scrap which also involved leaving stuff in the hallway for students to take and salvage for their projects. I did keep the memory drum but shortly gave it to a computer science student who drooled over it more than I did. They also had an NEC transistorized computer in another room (also long since removed, I think) which I guess would have been the model NEAC2201 or NEAC2203. Today, it seems hard for some to believe anyone would build things as ponderous as these things. But they were all important steppingstones along the way. Not only for the technical hardware architecture and software aspects, but also for introducing the technology into commercial and military applications, and then your home, and then your back pocket.

  • @jeffg360
    @jeffg360 Месяц назад +19

    I took care of our four AN/UYK-7 Sperry/Univac computers on my submarine. I had to program in Ultra-32 Assembler. Learned so much that’s just taken for granted today.

    • @user-ys7lf7wx1o
      @user-ys7lf7wx1o Месяц назад

      😮😮

    • @marcwolf60
      @marcwolf60 Месяц назад +1

      Making every byte count :)

    • @seanryder5473
      @seanryder5473 Месяц назад

      I was surface fleet, using a UN/UYK-20. I was also the teletype repairman for my ship. I know what you mean about taking so much of this for granted today. These kids today with their color monitors and pocket doodads!

  • @frenchmarky
    @frenchmarky Месяц назад +5

    When he unscrews the locking bolt with that little T-wrench so he can slide out the rack it reminds me of '2001' when Dave unlocks the latches on the main door to the computer room.

  • @billygamer3941
    @billygamer3941 Месяц назад +12

    All that wire wrap reminded me of a 1960s summer installing audio and signal wiring for a large TV production facility. We used wire wrap and pyramid blocks because the telephone company swore by them for ease of installation, long TBF, and, most importantly, signal quality.

    • @sometimesleela5947
      @sometimesleela5947 Месяц назад +1

      I am amazed that they still generally work without having been locked in with solder.

  • @smhedge
    @smhedge Месяц назад +5

    Wow, this took me down memory lane. This was the first computer that I worked on when I was in the Navy back in the early 90s. A couple differences I saw were that our teletype and paper tape reader were contained in one unit and the panel that he used to get the software loaded was on the top on ours.

  • @alpcns
    @alpcns Месяц назад +8

    This brings back some very fond memories. What a beautiful hunk of quality engineering. When I saw it, I thought "that's military hardware" - looks a lot like the military mainframes of my time, early '70's. Lovely stuff. These blinkenlights remain wonderful, and this setup has plenty of them. Thanks Fran!

  • @stuartdunbar6121
    @stuartdunbar6121 Месяц назад +6

    I was a Data Systems Technician (USN) in the 80's. They were still teaching and using the Univac 642A / 642B mainframes in the fleet. I've got my keyring also 🙂.

  • @markbanash921
    @markbanash921 Месяц назад +32

    I wire wrapped a 4K expansion board for my VIC 20 using a diagram I got out of BYTE magazine. I can't imagine the dedication and frustration involved to wire wrap something like this.

    • @jacktumblin4985
      @jacktumblin4985 Месяц назад

      No need to drown in the tedium and high error rate of manual wirewrapping! Ideal task for early computer controlled automation -- makinf machines like those shown here was at least as fascinating and ingenious as the machines themselves! (For example look into how CRTs were manufactured: every step is a magnificent accomplishment of mechanics and intricate precision metalforming, metallurgy, glass chemistry, high vacuum perfectionism, sputtered coatings, automatic and deftly exact glassblowing and forming, and even the labeling and packaging was an astonishment
      Meanwhile, custom robotic wirewrapping services have a very long history -- they were well established and widely available commercially at least as early as 1976 (when my employer toyed with outsourcing work on some big backplanes and boards full of TTL chips) and probably much, much earlier for the 'big guys' (Sperry, Raytheon, IBM, TRW, DEC, all the military and aviation contractors, etc.). You could then easily fix any mistakes with a simple manual wirewrap 'gun'-- one of my favorite tools for prototyping from early 1970s through early 90s. There's much to admire in the old packaging, connectors, sockets and DIP chips standardized on 0.10 inch centers.

    • @8BitNaptime
      @8BitNaptime Месяц назад +5

      Guess I was luckier, I found the plans in 73 Magazine (for amateur radio) for 8/16/24K expansion.

    • @additudeobx
      @additudeobx Месяц назад +6

      I worked at Western Electric / Bell Labs as a test engineer on North 120th in Denver. We built and tested PBX's. One section of the manufacturing floor was "Wire Wrap / Cabling". It was amazing to watch them route all he wires to create cable harnesses and hen wire wrap all that into the PBX frame backplanes. There were about 100 employes in that department. I always saw only women working those jobs. It was well known that males were not suited for that type of work.

  • @Roikat
    @Roikat Месяц назад +10

    A Univac destined for NASA was once delayed in shipping because someone who worked in the assembly area on the third shift stuck a cigarette in the backplane wiring. The test engineers spent two days testing every board and wiring harness because the backplane had already been tested before somebody stuck the cigarette in it and fused some wires. Smoking cigarettes was not permitted in the assembly area, obviously, but it was the late 60s and it was hard to make people not smoke.

  • @bronzelovegod
    @bronzelovegod Месяц назад +7

    Thanks. Interesting video of past machines. I remember these systems for picking and shipping items from a warehouse and a huge printouts for the daily pics. That was in the early '70s

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 Месяц назад +9

    Univac put the syllable "Uni" in front of a lot of their products. So much so, that the service engineers would drag in a vacuum cleaner to suck up the dust. They called it the "Uni-suck".

  • @techcafe0
    @techcafe0 Месяц назад +20

    "Made in Canada" stamped on the cards

    • @flyer617
      @flyer617 Месяц назад +2

      The connectors were made in Canada, the cards in the USA.

  • @normalizedaudio2481
    @normalizedaudio2481 Месяц назад +6

    I was a Unisys engineer. It was pretty good. Lot of jobs that payed good. Fun computers with big tapes.

  • @devinsullivan6160
    @devinsullivan6160 Месяц назад +4

    The wattage in noise loss alone.LOL Thanks Fran! Love it!

  • @baratono
    @baratono Месяц назад +7

    I started my IT career programming physics simulations in FORTRAN on a 1200 back in the early 80's. Decks of punch cards and magtape. Took forever to run.

  • @Torby4096
    @Torby4096 Месяц назад +2

    In the days of 8080 microcomputer, we had an old dual cassette drive we sometimes played with, but was mostly obsolete. Hans always wanted me to make a CP/M bios that made it drives C and D. One day, it quit working. I was not going to worry about it since we did not actually use it for anything, but Hans wanted it fixed. Inside, I found bunches of wire wrap. On the connector to the computer, there was a pin with the wire bunched around the bottom. So I straightened the wire and wrapped it correctly with my seldom used wire wrap tool. That thing never failed again. Hans was so happy he could read and write his old tapes again.
    I made a program following the code they used to toggle into the old Intel computer to copy files to and from the tape.

  • @wolfganglohrie6820
    @wolfganglohrie6820 Месяц назад +8

    Thanks Fran, great to see this old technics in great condition and operational. Cheers from Sydney, Australia

  • @rogerp6903
    @rogerp6903 Месяц назад +6

    Wow,so cool .Probably worth an absolute fortune back in the day!

    • @SirShanova
      @SirShanova Месяц назад +2

      1.8m in 2022 money!

  • @henrikjensen3278
    @henrikjensen3278 Месяц назад +5

    That sort of brings me back, my first programs was done on a Univac 1100, it could handle up to about 100 users i belive, but was rather slow when that happend. There was VDU and punch card access and a couple of printers for output, the fastest printer being 1000 lines a minute on 132 column fanfold

  • @kvmoore1
    @kvmoore1 Месяц назад +1

    I've seen plenty of recent pictures posted online of these old computers in museums as well as vintage video footage dating back to the 50's, 60's, and 70's, showing them in operation fully functioning. It is amazing see a machine like this still in existence. To see it still functioning in 2024 is REMARKABLE!!!! This computer was extremely well designed and engineered. Then again, I understand that it had to be in order to endure the rigorous environment if a naval vessel and still be very reliable. It's great to see that it's also well maintained and in great hands today at this museum.
    Computers such as this UNIVAC along will all the other big iron mainframes of the 50's, 60"s, and 70's were long before my time. As a kid growing up watching classic sci-fi T.V. shows and movies from that era, I've seen computers like these many times used as props (notably Burroughs equipment as well as portions of the SAGE computer). I've been fascinated by them ever since. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @daicekube
    @daicekube Месяц назад +4

    Great seeing an old UNIVAC running for once! Sort of tired of all those overpriced IBM boxes (but then I'm really a UNIVAC person ;D)! Have worked with later 1100 and 2200 so the 1219 is marvelous to see!

  • @gregebert5544
    @gregebert5544 Месяц назад +2

    I've never seen a tape drive with vacuum column and mechanical tensioners. I always thought they were mutually exclusive. BTW, vacuum column drives are superior because the only item that touches the magnetic portion of the tape is the head, though I have heard of at least 1 manufacturer that had a tape-cleaner, so maybe 2 devices. No pinch-rollers, because the capstan has vacuum holes and literally sucked the backside of the tape. Lot's of very clever engineers back in the day created some impressive machines; so glad to see some of them are still living and appreciated.

  • @tomsawyer3947
    @tomsawyer3947 Месяц назад +2

    Thank you so much for posting, Fran! That was a trip down memory lane. I was in the USN from 80 to 86. This is the Terrier MK152 Fire Control Computer Complex. (MY system!) It was hooked to the 55B Fire Control Radar, the missile launcher and NTDS. Each computer had 32K of magnetic core memory with .5 microsecond access time. I still remember some of the machine code instructions. Here's some trivia - if, when you open the drawer with the cards and pull it all the way out, you can reach your whole arm inside to the back and just barely be able to reach the row of fuses so conveniently placed. Luckily, none of them ever blew. "Terrier. When you care enough to send... the very best!"

  • @lostmarble0318
    @lostmarble0318 Месяц назад +2

    Very cool, Fran! Thank you so much for sharing - what a treat!

  • @hunahpuyamamoto3964
    @hunahpuyamamoto3964 Месяц назад

    Incredible. We all TRULY stand on the shoulders of giants!
    Thank you SO MUCH for sharing this.

  • @anthonycalia1317
    @anthonycalia1317 Месяц назад +1

    Back in the 1970's I worked for Lockheed Electronics the manufacturer of the MK86 Fire Control system which used the 1219 computer before upgrading to the AN/UYK-7 which was much smaller and more powerful. I remember most of the ships found that the 1219 would run forever if you did not turn it off! Did not like power cycles for some reason.

  • @mercster
    @mercster 23 дня назад

    Awesome. Never worked with machines of that vintage, but the sound of a noisy server room sure brings back memories. Wish I was young again.

  • @ke9tv
    @ke9tv Месяц назад +2

    The cards with discrete transistors are very like the ones in the GE 635 that I worked on once upon a time.
    Those serpentine tape tensioners are interesting - I never saw those on half-inch drives before (¾-inch drives used them). The half-inch drives I used all had vacuum columns. The height of the tape loops in the columns was sensed with a series of vactrols.
    I also worked with a Univac 1103 around 1980. It was pretty superannuated at that point. It eventually got replaced with one of the last Multics systems ever built, on a Honeywell 68/40.
    At one point my office was on the mezzanine above the factory floor for Honeywell mainframes. There was automated Wire-Wrap equipment - NC, rather than CNC, with the coordinates on paper tape. When the pinner (the machine that installed the pins that the wires wrapped around) was running, the noise was deafening, even upstairs!
    The DEC 2500 paper tape reader eventually was replaced in DEC's product line with one that used fanfold paper tape and had a stacker, so you never had to reel the stuff. MAJOR improvement! There were two punches available. One was conventional, the other had heated dies and melted its way through Mylar tape. It was neater and quieter, but less reliable.
    Those Model 35 KSR teletypes were built like tanks. I saw one once get (AAAAUGH!) dropped down a flight of stairs onto a concrete floor. It still worked after that trip!

  • @michaelpohas2608
    @michaelpohas2608 Месяц назад +8

    Parodied on "The Jetsons" as "Uniblab"

  • @jaminova_1969
    @jaminova_1969 Месяц назад +2

    Fascinating! I worked in 2 computer rooms loading magnetic tape and cassettes!

  • @paulgracey4697
    @paulgracey4697 Месяц назад

    Thanks Fran. This old octagenarian worked one of the three first U S Navy ships to use those dual tape drives along with the AN-USQ-20 NTDS computer by Univac. Ours was all prototype equipment. I also had a punched paper tape drive to boot up that system, which went down a lot in the early days. A floor full of punched paper tape had to be worked around, at sea on a moving deck when it was necessary to reboot. This was in 1963-4 in the Pacific.

  • @herby4215
    @herby4215 Месяц назад +1

    Computer technology had advanced alot through out the years.....in the UK I had a company thrown out a mainframe system like this during the 1980's...... amazing machines....

  • @litebkt
    @litebkt Месяц назад +2

    I started my career designing Univac machines Iin the seventies. I wire wrapped my first personal computer front Univac scrapped parts.

  • @scottthomas3792
    @scottthomas3792 Месяц назад +3

    My grandparents had an old vacuum tube TV that used wire wrap....not entirely, but it was there.
    I would love to see that old computer in operation....

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics Месяц назад +10

    Simply fascinating! When you were mentioning the backplane, I was like "just wait until you see that discombobulated mess of wires!". A splendidly built and huge machine - the build quality compares to Bendix G15 on UsagiElectric's channel.
    Keep'em VCF East videos coming - I'm still a bit disappointed there was no livestream at all.
    All work and no play makes Univac a dull computer.
    All work and no play makes Univac a dull computer.
    All work and no play makes Univac a dull computer.
    All work and no play makes Univac a dull computer.
    ...

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Месяц назад +6

      That Bendix computer looks amazing.
      I also find it equally amazing and interesting at how old machines managed to escape the scrap yard.

    • @KeritechElectronics
      @KeritechElectronics Месяц назад +5

      @@volvo09 it's the survivorship bias, unfortunately. Few of them were stashed in basements/storages to be found by nerds like us and then met happy ends in museums. Most were either scrapped, decommissioned or deteriorated under unfavorable conditions. Most of the history of computing is lost for ever, I think. Especially the one-of-a-kind machines.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Месяц назад +5

      @@KeritechElectronics yeah, I would agree that the vast majority of old "big iron" is gone. These are just the few survivors that made it... The machines are simply too bulky and too heavy to hold onto, once their time is up they get moved once, and that's to the scrapper, or to a warehouse before a final trip to the scrapper.

    • @trainliker100
      @trainliker100 Месяц назад +4

      That "mess" of wires is actually an advantage and usually deliberate. It ends up producing less cross talk by not having a lot of "neat" parallel wires and permits higher speeds.

  • @herbertsusmann986
    @herbertsusmann986 Месяц назад +2

    I am old enough to remember using a Teletype to interface with Data General Minicomputers back in the 70's. We would feed in test programs via paper tape. Like a different world back then.

  • @12e3pi
    @12e3pi Месяц назад +2

    Build quality is sick. Respect.

  • @MarcelHuguenin
    @MarcelHuguenin Месяц назад +2

    Thanks Fran, great video.

  • @madscientist5969
    @madscientist5969 21 день назад

    Thanks Fran...brings back memories of those days (and nights) I spent debugging and fault finding!

  • @aurynaichi7030
    @aurynaichi7030 Месяц назад +5

    The smell of hot wiring and gear oil :) And the noise!

  • @user-ic2bp3ss7m
    @user-ic2bp3ss7m Месяц назад

    I studied computer science at the University of Alabama in the mid to late seventies. They had a Univac. Punch cards, wide fan fold paper, cake carrier disc holders, refrigerator sized tape drives, washing machine sized disc drives, 17 inch wide line printers- state of the art!

  • @Madness832
    @Madness832 Месяц назад +5

    That young dude was kinda dreamy.

    • @SirShanova
      @SirShanova Месяц назад +6

      Thanks lol

    • @alexanderwhite8320
      @alexanderwhite8320 Месяц назад

      Probably high on weed. A way to enhance the experience of using this fascinating equipment

  • @mikerope5785
    @mikerope5785 Месяц назад +2

    This looks like the cooles museum ever. Also cool because of the size of the air conditioners.

    • @compu85
      @compu85 Месяц назад

      The VCF Museum is great! If you're near New Jersey stop by!

  • @Jedward108
    @Jedward108 Месяц назад +2

    Fascinating, the mechanical construction and electronics packaging techniques.

  • @daviddun1389
    @daviddun1389 Месяц назад +1

    Incredible Germaniums. Wirewrap is king, I remember a conference in Reno Nevada on the subject by IWCS/US Army Fort Monmoth, circa 1988, there was young engineer showing the reliability of Solderless wrapped connections in his slideshow presentation.

  • @fmphotooffice5513
    @fmphotooffice5513 Месяц назад +3

    I swear to god for a second I thought the thumbnail was of a walkman.Then the scale --- oh, ok.

  • @mcolville
    @mcolville Месяц назад +1

    Hey Usagi Electric was at this show!!

  • @LightSoySauce
    @LightSoySauce Месяц назад +2

    That's totally effing awesome!! Thanks Fran !!

  • @CARLiCON
    @CARLiCON Месяц назад +2

    1219B or not 1219B? that is the question..fascinating, thanks for sharing!

  • @va3rca
    @va3rca Месяц назад +1

    Fantastic camera work on this! Felt like I was there in person. Thank you Fran!

  • @mlaprarie
    @mlaprarie Месяц назад

    It was really nice to see your videos in my feed again Fran. 😊

  • @rbnootan101
    @rbnootan101 Месяц назад +1

    OMG! memories thank you Fran 👏🏻👍✌️

  • @yclept9
    @yclept9 Месяц назад +3

    Like a lot of Univacs, it's one's complement arithmetic. Its Nike Zeus computers from the early 60s were two's complement and variously 22 and 23 bit words.

  • @kevincozens6837
    @kevincozens6837 Месяц назад +1

    The HP 2114 computer I got to operate while a student in Junior High School came with a paper tape reader. After the tape was read and it was now on the floor we used the hand held motorized tape winder that was provided with the computer to wind up the tape so it was ready for the next time we needed to use it. The operator in this video had to manually rewind the mylar tape.

  • @Claes_Isacson
    @Claes_Isacson Месяц назад +3

    Super cool! Thx for bringing us along Fran! 🎉

  • @Paul_Wetor
    @Paul_Wetor Месяц назад

    It's nice to see old computers in action, not sitting there lifeless. I started programming in 1972, when computers were fun to watch.

  • @jjctestc
    @jjctestc Месяц назад +1

    Bonjours de France, Fran ;) . Always superbe , amazing ... Bravo

  • @lutello3012
    @lutello3012 Месяц назад +2

    11:02 I still can't believe it's done that way.

  • @stephanshemenski6348
    @stephanshemenski6348 Месяц назад +3

    I believe the AN/SPN42C Automated Carrier Landing System (ACLS) used the univac 1219 to process data and control the radar system and send commands up to the aircraft as it landed.

  • @alabamacajun7791
    @alabamacajun7791 Месяц назад +2

    I have seen a lot of machines and admit I have never seen that one. Complete with the "mod" take drive.

  • @simonabunker
    @simonabunker Месяц назад +4

    Was this at VCF East? Usagi Electric has just put out a great video looking around this museum - with most of the machines off so it's a lot quieter!
    Great that you can show us a look into this machine!

  • @davidedgar2818
    @davidedgar2818 Месяц назад +1

    I was able to see a (?) version at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1970. It was used for molecular modeling that my neighbor was investigating. He gave me a personal tour of his lab as well as the computing room. Just calculating one microscopic crystal required half a room of print outs in boxes. The data had to be consolidated and rerun numerous times to come up with a 3D model.

  • @boots6384
    @boots6384 Месяц назад +1

    I maintain equipment with wire wrapped backplanes just like that one. We even have all the tooling to do the wrapping.

  • @horusfalcon
    @horusfalcon Месяц назад +1

    There was one of these on CVN-65, USS Enterprise, until about 1979 that I know of.

  • @greatwhite1958
    @greatwhite1958 Месяц назад +1

    What beautiful engineering.

  • @GreyRockOne
    @GreyRockOne Месяц назад +4

    Nice Fran, also a genuine 16-year old geek nerd in the background who's parents weren't even born when this was introduced.. Now find us a "Burroughs B205" to show off! Thanks Fran

    • @SirShanova
      @SirShanova Месяц назад +2

      I just got lucky to work on this machine. And you're right with the parents thing!

  • @AllFirstHand
    @AllFirstHand Месяц назад +1

    I've done my fair share of replacing the indicator lights on equipment like that. I'm one of the few people I work with that knows anything about wire-wrapping.

  • @grandrapids57
    @grandrapids57 10 дней назад

    THANK YOU FOR THIS VIDEO! This was really perfect for me!

  • @aMulliganStew
    @aMulliganStew Месяц назад +1

    Lots of nostalgia

  • @michaelmoore7975
    @michaelmoore7975 Месяц назад +2

    My favorite was the Eleniak model.
    Specifically, the Erika.

  • @nilo70
    @nilo70 Месяц назад +1

    He’s the last Electro-mechanical teck , I worked with a few of them 😊

  • @colangelo1927
    @colangelo1927 Месяц назад

    I started working at Sperry UNIVAC in 1985 with 1100/10 and some tape drive models such as Uniservo 16 , Uniservo 20 and 0770 printer, all very well built equipments.

  • @tEqUiko
    @tEqUiko Месяц назад +2

    Cool groove @ da 🔚 end 🖖✌️19:19

  • @TheCommuted
    @TheCommuted Месяц назад +2

    I worked for Sperry Univac on model 1150. Which was a later model. It didn't look as cool as this does but it was bigger, 1180 maybe...

  • @strayling1
    @strayling1 21 день назад

    Wow. This brings back memories of standing /inside/ a PDP11 to swap out circuit cards from the depths of the cabinet.

  • @AnthonyFrancisJones
    @AnthonyFrancisJones Месяц назад

    Brilliant! Even love the size of the red Dymo label at 21:02 with 1532-2 written on it!

  • @johngdoty
    @johngdoty Месяц назад

    You can tell that machine was built to withstand some rough environments. Probably why it still works.

  • @neilbrookins8428
    @neilbrookins8428 Месяц назад

    I recognize this! I was just there two weeks ago. Great to experience in person.

  • @bigbadwolf1966
    @bigbadwolf1966 Месяц назад +2

    MAGNIFICENT

  • @resipsaloquitur13
    @resipsaloquitur13 Месяц назад +2

    Thats just too cool.

  • @soniclab-cnc
    @soniclab-cnc Месяц назад +1

    What a beautiful machine

  • @teejayy2130
    @teejayy2130 Месяц назад +2

    I love those original computers. Proper hardware😊

  • @repeatdefender6032
    @repeatdefender6032 Месяц назад +1

    Man that is so flipping cool!

  • @ATLRCFlyer
    @ATLRCFlyer Месяц назад +1

    5:51 the young man has a device in the palm of his hand that's more powerful than anything in that room, yet everything in that room led to the device that he has in his hand,

  • @RadioChief52
    @RadioChief52 Месяц назад

    I remember this computer from my Navy days in the early '70's. I was an Electronics Tech (Radar), not Data Systems, so I never knew much about it except that one of the radars I worked on, the AN/SPN-10, was an all weather carrier controlled approach radar that locked onto a corner reflector on the plane's nose gear and guided it in to a perfect landing. I think this computer did all the number crunching. I distinctly remember the data techs pulling out the drawers and showing me the hundreds of tiny cards full of discrete transistors. I worked the RF and antenna end and a bit on the display electronics of that radar and several other radars associated with carrier air traffic control center. Fun times.

  • @krwd
    @krwd Месяц назад +1

    when i was in college they had a Sperry Univac mainframe in an air conditioned room that was off limits to mere mortals like myself . another university in the area was Carnegie Mellon they had a Cray 9000 that sat in a swimming pool size cooling bath it ran the university and several companies in Pittsburgh also used it

  • @mrbusdriversir
    @mrbusdriversir Месяц назад +2

    Very cool!

  • @Torby4096
    @Torby4096 Месяц назад +1

    Our optical paper tape reader had a highly geared takeup reel to pull the tape through. We tried to crank it too fast for the computer, but never succeeded.

  • @TheGreatAtario
    @TheGreatAtario Месяц назад +1

    I was kind of expecting that tape reader to automatically rewind the tape by itself after it finished reading

  • @josephgaviota
    @josephgaviota Месяц назад

    12:50 Seeing that kid wind the tape reminds me of how many MILES of paper tape I've wound in my day.

  • @ScottSUP.
    @ScottSUP. Месяц назад +2

    I appreciate Fran's enthusiasm for vintage tech!