Difference between revisions of "IBM 7094"

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It appeared in two models: the original 7094 (sometimes known as the 7094 I); and the 7094 II, announced in May, 1963, with the first installation in April, 1964.
 
It appeared in two models: the original 7094 (sometimes known as the 7094 I); and the 7094 II, announced in May, 1963, with the first installation in April, 1964.
  
The latter had about twice the speed of the original; due in part to the introduction of [[pipeline]] techniques (pioneered by the IBM [[STRETCH]]), but also a slightly faster clock.
+
The latter had about twice the speed of the original; due in part to the introduction of [[pipeline]] techniques (pioneered by the [[IBM 7030 STRETCH]]), but also a slightly faster [[clock]].
  
 
Total production amounted to 130 7094 I's, and 125 7094 II's.
 
Total production amounted to 130 7094 I's, and 125 7094 II's.

Revision as of 00:34, 5 October 2018


IBM 7094
Manufacturer: International Business Machines
Year Announced: January, 1962
Year Discontinued: July, 1969
Form Factor: mainframe
Word Size: 36 bits
Logic Type: SMS cards using alloy-junction transistors
Clock Speed: 2.0 µsec (basic cycle, 7094 I)
1.4 µsec (7094 II)
Memory Speed: 2.0 µsec
Physical Address Size: 15 bits (32K words)
Operating System: SOS, IBSYS, IBJOB, FMS, CTSS
Predecessor(s): IBM 7090
Successor(s): none
Price: roughly US$3.5M


The IBM 7094 was IBM's last commercial scientific mainframe (built at a time when computers for scientific and business computing used separate instruction sets).

It had about 1.4-2.4 time the computer power of its predecessor, the IBM 7090. It was upwardly compatible with the 7090, but did have extra index registers (going from three to seven), and hardware double-precision floating point support.

It appeared in two models: the original 7094 (sometimes known as the 7094 I); and the 7094 II, announced in May, 1963, with the first installation in April, 1964.

The latter had about twice the speed of the original; due in part to the introduction of pipeline techniques (pioneered by the IBM 7030 STRETCH), but also a slightly faster clock.

Total production amounted to 130 7094 I's, and 125 7094 II's.

Further reading

  • Charles J. Bashe, Lyle R. Johnson, John H. Palmer, Emerson W. Pugh, IBM's Early Computers, MIT Press, Cambridge, 1986

External links