List of transistorized computers
This is a list of transistorized computers, which were digital computers that used discrete transistors as their primary logic elements. Discrete transistors were a feature of logic design for computers from about 1960, when reliable transistors became economically available, until monolithic integrated circuits displaced them in the 1970s. The list is organized by operational date or delivery year to customers. Computers announced, but never completed, are not included. Some very early "transistor" computers may still have included vacuum tubes in the power supply or for auxiliary functions.
1950s
1953
- University of Manchester Transistor Computer 1953 (prototype) 1955 (full scale) experimental
1954
- Bell Labs TRADIC for U.S. Air Force
1955
- Harwell CADET demonstrated February 1955, one-off scientific computer
1956
- Electrotechnical Laboratory ETL Mark III (Japan) experimental, began development 1954, completed 1956,[1] Japan's first transistorized stored-program computer[2][3][4]
- MIT TX-0
- Metrovick 950
1957
- Burroughs SM-65 Atlas ICBM Guidance Computer MOD1, AN/GSQ-33 (no relation to Manchester ATLAS)
- Ramo-Wooldridge (TRW) RW-30 airborne computer[5][6]
- Univac TRANSTEC,[7] for US Navy
- Univac ATHENA, US Air Force missile guidance (ground control)
- IBM 608 transistor calculator (its development was preceded by the prototyping of an experimental all-transistor version of the 604 demonstrated in October 1954), announced 1955, first shipped Dec 1957
- DRTE Computer, Canadian experimental system delivered 1957, added parallel math unit and other improvements in 1960.[8]
1958
- Electrologica X1
- TX-2
- UNIVAC Solid State ("mostly" solid state)
- Philco Transac S-1000 scientific computer- Navy/NSA SOLO, one-off for NSA
- Philco Transac S-2000 electronic data processing computer[9]
- Mailüfterl
- RCA 501 intended as a commercial system but used in military applications
- Siemens System 2002[10][11] - Prototype in operation since 1956, first machine was put in operation in 1958.[12]
- Autonetics Recomp II
1959
- NCR 304, announced in 1957, first delivery in 1959
- Olivetti Elea 9003
- MOBIDIC
- IBM 7090 (6/60)[13]
- IBM 1401
- IBM 1620 Model I and successors IBM 1620 Model II
- NEAC 2201 (NEC)
- EMIDEC 1100
- TRW RW-300[14]
- PDP-1
- Standard Elektrik Lorenz SEL ER 56[15][16][17]
1960s
1960
- AEI 1010[18]
- Honeywell 200
- Honeywell 800 first installation 1960
- UNIVAC LARC
- CDC 160 (7/60)[19]
- CDC 1604 (1/60)[20]
- Datasaab D2
- DRTE Computer, expanded version
- Elliott 803
- GE 210
- AN/FSQ-32 (IBM 4020)
- AN/FSQ-31V
- IBM 7070 (6/60)[21]
- Japan Electrotechnical Laboratory ETL Mark V (5/60)
- Mitsubishi MELCOM 3409
- Clary DE-60
- Monroe Calculating Machine Mark XI (or "Monrobot XI")
- Packard Bell Corporation PB 250[22][23][24] (PB250; no relation to the modern brand of personal computers) used, among others, as the controller for hybrid digital/analog system TRICE[25][26] and HYCOMP 250,[27] and as the control computer for mobile data systems[28]
- Philco TRANSAC S-2000 Model 211
- RCA 301
1961
- Plessey XL4
- MANIAC III
- CAB500
- LEO III
- English Electric KDP10
- Bendix G-20
- NEC NEAC 2205
- CDC 160A (7/61)[29]
- CDC 924,[30]
- CDC 924A (8/61)[31]
- Fujitsu FACOM 222
- GE-200 series
- GE-225 1961
- GE-215 1963
- GE-205,235 1964
- GE Datanet 30
- Honeywell 400 (12/61)[32]
- IBM 1410
- IBM 7030 Stretch
- IBM 7074 (12/51)[33]
- Zuse Z23
- IBM 7080 (9/61)[34]
- IBM 1710
- Matsushita MADIC IIA
- RCA 301 (2/61)[35]
- TRW-130 aka AN/UYK-1[36] for Transit submarine navigation satellite receivers
- UNIVAC 490
- Regnecentralen GIER[37][38]
1962
- Philco TRANSAC S-2000 Model 212
- Atlas Computer (Manchester)
- ASC-15
- Burroughs D825[39]
- CDC 1604-A[40]
- DEC PDP-4
- GE 412 (7/62)[41]
- ICT 1301
- ILLIAC II
- UNIVAC 1004
- UNIVAC 1107
- UNIVAC III
- IBM 7072 (6/62)[42]
- IBM 7094 (9/62)[43]
- Autonetics D-17B
- Royal Radar Establishment Automatic Computer
- Telefunken TR4
- RW-400 aka AN/FSQ-27 by TRW[44][45][46][47]
- SDS 910
- SDS 920
- Odra 1002
- Ferranti Argus - first delivery in 1962, renamed to Argus 200 in 1963
- Librascope L-2010
1963
- Librascope LGP-21
- IBM 1440
- IBM 7010
- IBM 7040 and IBM 7044
- CDC 3000 series, 5 models (1963-1967)
- DEC PDP-5
- Elliott 503
- Ferranti-Packard 6000
- Ferranti Argus 100
- Honeywell 1400 (12/63)
- Honeywell 1800 (11/63)
- Computer Control Company DDP-24 (6/63)[48]
- RCA 601[49]
- UNIVAC 418
- UNIVAC 1050 III*UNIVAC 1050 III (9/63)[50]
- SDS 9300
- BESM 3M, 4 circa 1963
- Siemens 3003[51]
- IBM Saturn Launch Vehicle Computer (Hybrid, Aug 1963)
1964
- Burroughs B5500
- CDC 1604B[52]
- DEC PDP-7
- DEC PDP-8
- IBM 7094 II (4/64)[53]
- GE 235 (4/64)[54]
- GE-400 series
- GE 415 (5/64)[55]
- GE 425 (6/64)[56]
- English Electric KDF8
- English Electric KDF9
- Honeywell 200/200 (7/64)[57]
- Honeywell 200/2200 (12/65)[58]
- RCA 3301 (7/64)
- SDS 925
- SDS 930
- UNIVAC 1004 II, III (6/64)[59]
- CDC 160G (4/64)[60]
- CDC 6600
- Titan (1963 computer) (Atlas 2)
- Bunker-Ramo BR-133[61] aka AN/UYK-3[62]
- UMC-10
- PDP-6
1965
- ICT 1900 series
- CDC 1604-C[63]
- GE 435 (9/65)[64]
- GE-600 series (some integrated circuits)
- NCR 315-RMC
- PDP-8 & 8S (1965 & 1966)[65]
- IBM System/360 family, 14 models (1965-1971). Used IBM SLT[66] hybrid circuits.
- IBM 1130 IBM's least-expensive computer at that time, also used hybrid circuits (IBM SLT)[66]
- IBM M44/44X
- SDS 940
- TRASK, transistor version of BESK
- Model 109-B
- Ural computer family, 3 models (1965-1969)[67][68][69]
- Fabri-Tek BI-TRAN SIX Computer Educational System[70][71][72][73][74]
- Computer Control DDP-116 & 124
- Marconi Myriad I. Hybrid using Ferranti Minicor I hybrid DTL
- UNIVAC 1108 II (9/65)[75]
1966
1967
1968
- PDP-10 (first model only - later versions used ICs)
- SDS 945
- BESM-6 (first model only - later versions used ICs)
- Moscow Power Engineering Institute M-54[87]
- Digico Micro 16
See also
Notes
- Used for training and research purposes.
- Revised in 1969 as Cellatron 8205.
References
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- Early Computers, Information Processing Society of Japan
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- Early Computers: Brief History, Information Processing Society of Japan
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The first production computer was delivered in October 1960.
- "PB-250". The Retro-Computing Society of RI, Inc.
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(help) - James P. Anderson; Samuel A. Hoffman; Joseph Shifman; Robert J. Williams (1962), D825 - a multiple-computer system for command & control, Proceedings of the Fall Joint Computer Conference, Spartan, pp. 86–96, doi:10.1109/AFIPS.1962.41
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- "The Air Force comptroller". October 1967. Retrieved September 6, 2020.
the 1604B was a three year old second generation computer [in 1967]
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- trw :: BR-133 Brochure May64. May 1964.
- "AN/UYK-3 General Purpose Computer".
- "Record of Revisions". Reference Manual Control Data 1604-Computer (PDF). CDC.
- "Computer Characteristics Quarterly" (PDF). Adams Associates. 1967. p. 26.
- Jones, Douglas W. "The PDP-8". THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA Department of Computer Science. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
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A new microelectronics technique called Solid Logic Technology, or SLT, is utilized in the new family of IBM/360 computers. This new technology provides a hybrid, integrated circuit module which combines discrete, glass-encapsulated silicon transistors and diodes with stencil-screened land patterns and precision passive components.
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