This thing here looks absolutely gorgeous and it would be really cool to use with a PDP-1: https://oscilloscopemusic.com/software/oscilloscope/perhaps it can be modified to have a nice P7 phosphor and hooked up to the type 30 simulation? :)
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Hi,For the GT40 something I suspected but wouldn't be able to prove is the GT40's impact on the design of the PDP-11/05.
...
Regarding the 74181 there is/was confusion on the year it was first released. I had tried to confirm when DEC first received the 74181 chips
and started to prototype the PDP-11/05. I wondered if DEC had received pre-production versions of the 74181 or early production samples etc.

On Mar 13, 2026, at 8:59 PM, Clem Cole <cl...@ccc.com> wrote:Regarding the 74181 there is/was confusion on the year it was first released. I had tried to confirm when DEC first received the 74181 chipsDEC central engineering at them from TI when it was released in the spring of 1970. AMD would become one of the firms that had a 74181 second-source license. DEC used (and shipped) the 74181 on both 11/20 and the PDP-12 shortly after they were available in volume. They continued to use it through the 11/780 but also began designing with the AMD 2900 family after 1975.
and started to prototype the PDP-11/05. I wondered if DEC had received pre-production versions of the 74181 or early production samples etc.I can easily imagine that DEC purchased and shipped the AMD version as a second source for better pricing, but they would have qualified them for the KD11-B and would not have shipped pre-production parts in a revenue system. By the late 1960's timeframe, DEC's engineering and manufacturing processes were fairly formal. I could have believed that using less well-qualified parts >>might<< have happened earlier with something like the PDP-1, but by the time of the PDP-11 program, it just could not see it being possible.
Other second sources for the ‘181 would have been Signetics or others; DEC used a lot of parts from Signetics in the early days of the -11s. The 11/20 was one of the few (non-VLSI) -11s that did NOT use the ‘181. Its ALU was designed around the 7482 2-bit wide full adder and 74H53.See https://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/pdp11/1120/1120_SystemSchems_Feb70.pdf pages M224, K7-1 — K8-2
AMD 2900 chips, and in particular the 2901 saw use in the Floating Point processors for the 11/34 and 11/44.
Surprisingly, (to me, anyway,) the 11/60’s FPP, the FP-11E used the 74S181 and not the AMD 2901, even though the 34 and 60 were contemporaneous.
I don’t know of any DEC designed pdp11s that had a CPU built around an AMD2901; I can’t speak to VAXen.
On Mar 15, 2026, at 7:39 PM, Clem Cole <cl...@ccc.com> wrote:As I understand it, the big screw-up for the 11/60 was the 40-class system limits of its MMU and lack of I/D.