Difference between revisions of "PDP-11/93"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 3: Line 3:
 
Apparently this was a family of PDP-11's, with the 93 being a tower case version.
 
Apparently this was a family of PDP-11's, with the 93 being a tower case version.
  
It would seem to have a QBUS backplane, and run at 1 VUPS, making the 93/94 the fastest PDP-11.
+
It would seem to have a QBUS backplane, and run at 1 VUPS, making the 93/94 the fastest [[PDP-11]].
 +
 
 +
== hampage.hu ==
 +
Quote:
 +
<i>
 +
Introduced in 1990. The last of the original (DEC) PDP-11s. Technically it is a re-enginered [[PDP-11/83]] (it uses the same J-11 CPU) with more modern components (it could be modified for 20MHz clock frequency), and 2 or 4 MB's of on-board parity RAM. It also features eight buffered serial lines (a terminal multiplexer emulated by a Z80) on the processor board.
 +
</i>
  
 
{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}
 
{{PDP-11}}
 
{{PDP-11}}
 
[[Category:DEC processors]][[Category:QBUS processors]]
 
[[Category:DEC processors]][[Category:QBUS processors]]

Revision as of 15:26, 4 May 2011

PDP-11 models 93 & 94

Apparently this was a family of PDP-11's, with the 93 being a tower case version.

It would seem to have a QBUS backplane, and run at 1 VUPS, making the 93/94 the fastest PDP-11.

hampage.hu

Quote: Introduced in 1990. The last of the original (DEC) PDP-11s. Technically it is a re-enginered PDP-11/83 (it uses the same J-11 CPU) with more modern components (it could be modified for 20MHz clock frequency), and 2 or 4 MB's of on-board parity RAM. It also features eight buffered serial lines (a terminal multiplexer emulated by a Z80) on the processor board.