On 2016-05-24 9:30 PM, Eric Smith wrote:
On Tue, May 24, 2016 at 3:09 PM, Brent Hilpert <hilp...@cs.ubc.ca> wrote:
Yes, I examined this in some detail last year after mention on the list, and 
wrote it up:
         http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~hilpert/e/corerope/index.html
That's a great write-up! Thanks!

I'm not sure about how IBM TROS was driven, but the core-rope memory
I've examined was not from an AGC and didn't use the switching core
technique, so I wouldn't consider that decode technique to be an
inherent property of core rope memory, although it's certainly clever.

IBM TROS see United States Patent US3432830, If you have access to old issues of the IBM Journal of Research and Development there is apparently an article in the September 1964 issue.

Other control stores used in early 360s was BCROS this is a capacitive memory using 2 capacitors for every bit, this is not the design used in the 360/30 but was used in higher end machines because it was faster. There is an article describing this control store in IBM Journal of Research and Development July 1968. The 360/30 used what is called CCROS it is described in a March 1966 IBM Journal of Research and Development

IBM Journal of Research and Development scans are available on IEEE Explorer. There is also a breifer description of all three in the book "IBM's 360 and Early 370 Systems" beginning on page 210.

Paul

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