This would be an all winter project.
It is called a Cray-1 or -2 depending on how you want to design it.


This should mesh perfectly with those of us having a PiDP-11 which was I guess from talking with one of the guys at the museum, something that their computer offloaded the output to so the little computer could do the busy work of printing or writing to disk.
They had something called a Data General Eclipse which looks a lot like the DEC stuff, maybe they copied the idea:

and speaking of drum storage:
Look at the size of the drive motor on this. Those were fixed heads apparently.

I'm not sure we'd like all those wires, but a few would be nice as a facade and then let Simh take care of emulating the beast.
This was a fun visit to the Chippewa Valley Industry and Technology open house on the 28th for Seymour Cray's 100th birthday. I had no idea they had so many models. The Serial #1 Cray-1 which went to Los Alamos Labs in Albuquerque
was there. They said it had a period of operation of over 16 years and was very reliable. Some disks that were about 4' across were mounted on the walls. The various other Cray versions were open to look in and rap on the machined metal supports. The cooling liquid which was sort of like freon was almost twice as heavy as water to compare a couple jugs of it to life. So for those wondering about cooling their Pi-5s with a fan, I guess you could submerge the whole thing in this liquid.
Hope this was a fun diversion for the members here.
Dale
This would be an all winter project.
It is called a Cray-1 or -2 depending on how you want to design it.
I'm not sure we'd like all those wires, but a few would be nice as a facade and then let Simh take care of emulating the beast.
This was a fun visit to the Chippewa Valley Industry and Technology open house on the 28th for Seymour Cray's 100th birthday. I had no idea they had so many models. The Serial #1 Cray-1 which went to Los Alamos Labs in Albuquerque
was there. They said it had a period of operation of over 16 years and was very reliable.
They had something called a Data General Eclipse which looks a lot like the DEC stuff, maybe they copied the idea:
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On Sep 29, 2025, at 2:51 PM, Malcolm Ray <m...@apathetic.org.uk> wrote:
I believe they were
quite successful, but I recall the Eclipse being rather flaky at first
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Data General was started by refugees from DEC, frustrated by the direction management was taking the company.
They were certainly competing with DEC in the mini market, first with the Nova, then the Eclipse. I believe they werequite successful, but I recall the Eclipse being rather flaky at first.
For an insight into the company, read Tracy Kidder's book 'The Soul of a New Machine'. I read it decades ago, butI remember it being unexpectedly gripping for a book about engineering. No doubt it took a few liberties.
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On Monday, September 29, 2025 at 2:51:11 PM UTC-4 Sheepless wrote:Data General was started by refugees from DEC, frustrated by the direction management was taking the company.
...
The PDP-11 was introduced by DEC in 1970.
FWIW the first Eclipse model and Nova 4 (last Nova-line model) shared the same CPU hardware ... right down to the PCB. That was because the Eclipse introduced bit-slice design and the differences between these two CPUs was merely microcode (the Eclipse used more -- both to support extension of the instruction set and to consolidate functions previously requiring separate boards). Prior Nova-line models used '181-based ALUs and a mix of random logic increasingly concentrated into small ROMs and PALs.
The Nova 4 was not a planned product; the Nova 3 was intended to be the end of the Nova-line CPUs. However customer demand (aka "sales resistance" to the introduction of the first Eclipse model) necessitated a temporary retreat ... fortunately quite possible given the bit-slice hardware design and the inherently upward-compatible instruction set design of the Eclipse. if you wanted to add memory management on the Eclipse you paid for a different set of microcode ROMs; there was no change in the actual hardware other than plugging in more memory boards.
If one wanted to make a CPU design comparison between the original Nova and the PDP-8 it would be to the 8/S. The first NOVA was nibble-oriented thus requiring 4 passes to produce a 16-bit result. This is what allowed a single 15x15" PCB to hold a complete CPU.
If one wanted to make a system design comparison between the Nova-line computers and the PDP-11 family it would IMO revolve around the electrical design of the backplane. The PDP-11 was rigorously a bus-based design -- initially the Unibus. The Nova-line followed more a seat-of-your-pants design evolution; while there was a well-controlled I/O bus that enabled a wide range of I/O controllers to be shared across all Nova-line and then Eclipse computers ... the memory interface changed from model-to-model throughout the core-era. It didn't really gel into a fixed design until the Nova 4/Eclipse era and the switch to an all-MOS memory environment. DG constantly fiddled with the CPU-Memory interface to gain the best possible system performance at the lowest cost-point in the core-era. In consequence the Nova - Super Nova - Nova 800/1200 - Nova 2 - Nova 3 generally require different memories ... an annoying property if you were "raised" on the PDP-11 family.
On Tuesday, September 30, 2025 at 3:41:12 AM UTC-4 pbi...@gmail.com wrote:
FWIW the first Eclipse model and Nova 4 (last Nova-line model) shared the same CPU hardware ... right down to the PCB. ...
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An IBM 360 and 370 is high on my wish list too, and there too I hope that some people will step into the breach. Rich Cornwell already indicated that he'd be up for it. I need to organise myself a bit here (brain fog puts a brake on everything I do), but the first step is to send some original IBM parts to the switch manufacturer we use. Their R&D guy is happy to help with making replicas of its switches, dials and buttons.

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I don't know of any cycle-exact 360/370 simulators (which doesn't mean there aren't any)
If I had my choice of future PiDP system, I'd like a Data General Eclipse
I had planned one after the PiDP/8, I even got a real front panel to work from. But at the time, I could not find any OS or other software for it. And gave the panel away - to a good cause, I forget who but he had restored a whole Eclipse and was missing the front panel. But I think, indeed, it might be too much of a niche.
Oscar:
I have attached a picture of one of the coveted IBM switches from the era of high-design and snazzy looks for computers.
This one looks more opaque, which some of them were, but this one is lighted and more translucent. I wish I had powered it up to show the look it gives, but I'm sure you know exactly what the appearance is from having been around them before.
Anyway, I'm hoping you can find a switch guy to reproduce the fixed indicator lights and the push to do something switches which were also illuminated. They were amazing works of art, in my opinion. Dale