KL10
From Computer History Wiki
KL10 | |
Manufacturer: | Digital Equipment Corporation |
---|---|
Architecture: | PDP-10 |
Year Design Started: | January, 1972 |
Year First Shipped: | June, 1975 |
Form Factor: | mainframe |
Word Size: | 36 bits |
Logic Type: | ECL ICs |
Design Type: | clocked synchronous, microcoded |
Microword Width: | 80 |
Microcode Length: | 1280 (Model A) 2K (Model B) |
Clock Speed: | 500 nsec |
Cache Size: | 2K words |
Memory Speed: | 1.0 μsec (initial core memory), 500 nsec (later MOS main memory) |
Physical Address Size: | 22 bits |
Virtual Address Size: | 18 bits (Model A and B) 23 bits (Model E) |
Memory Management: | paging, 512-word pages |
Operating System: | TOPS-10, TOPS-20, ITS, WAITS, TENEX |
Predecessor(s): | KI10 |
Successor(s): | none |
Price: | US$250K (CPU), US$600K-1.2M (system) |
The KL10 was the third generation of PDP-10 processors. It was built out of ECL, on hex cards. It was the first microprogrammed PDP-10 processor; the design was inspired by Foonly's F-1
It was used in the DECsystem-10 models 1080 and 1090 systems (with an external memory bus, compatible with the earlier KA10 and KI10), and the DECSYSTEM-20 20xx systems (with an internal memory bus).
Like its predecessor, the KI10, it was initially released in a single-processor version; a two-CPU version was released later.
There was a single KL10 ITS machine, MIT-MC. It was later renamed to MX and was shut down in 1988. There was also a KL10 in the Stanford WAITS system.