>>>> from  "Dave Wade via cctalk" <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
Sent: Thursday, 10 May, 2018 5:53:38 PM
Subject: RE: how fast were drum memories?

I don't think early drums were terribly fast, but this wasn't  a problem 
because often they were on serial machines, and the data had to sync with the 
clock speed of the machine.

I know that the Manchester Mk1 which evolved from the baby had a drum added. 
The design of the drum used changed as the machine evolved. There is some info 
on this evolution here. 

http://curation.cs.manchester.ac.uk/computer50/www.computer50.org/mark1/gethomas/manchester_drums.html

Its interesting to note that the size of the drum was decreased to around 6" as 
suggested by others.

The Ferranti Pegasus also had a drum for main storage and delay lines for 
"registers". 
This was a physically large drum with a capacity of 5120 40 it words.

The Ferranti Pegasus the clock speed was 333Khz and this was derived from clock 
tracks written on the drum avoiding any sync problems.
However in order to achieve this transfer rate the designers built the tracks 
in pairs with alternate bits coming from different tracks..
The large diameter of the drum gave problems getting consistent flying height 
for the heads, which resulted in large changes in signal level.

<<<<

See 
https://archive.org/stream/bitsavers_icticl1900orageSep64_1140393/1962_Drum_Storage_Sep64_djvu.txt
for the spec on the 1962/3/4 drums for the ICT/ICL 1900 series
When we (City University) acquired our 1905E system (think it was ex Swansea 
uni.) it came with a 1964 drum (0.5M 24-bit words) made, I think, by Bryant.
Took up a lot of floor space and was probably the slowest of our peripherals to 
come up to "ready" from power on*

we "let it go" when we needed to install more equipment in the computer room - 
don't know what happened to it.

* the big CDC at ULCC had a huge drum† - but it had its problems - any 
power-off, even for a second or so, meant that it needed 
a full hour to be operational again.
† or, perhaps, a special fixed disk.

Andy

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