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CDC 1700
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The CDC 1700 is a 16-bit word minicomputer, manufactured by the Control Data Corporation with deliveries beginning in May 1966.[1]

Over the years there were several versions. The original 1700 was constructed using air-cooled CDC 6600-like cordwood logic modules and core memory, although later models used different technology. The final models, called Cyber-18, added four general-purpose registers and a number of instructions to support a time-sharing operating system.[2]

System name Processor Minimum RAM Maximum RAM Cycle time
1700 1704 4 KW 32 KW 1.1 μs
1714 1714 12 KW 64 KW 1.1 μs
SC1700 1774 4 KW 32 KW 1.5 μs
System 17 1784 4 KW 64 KW 0.9 or 0.6 μs
CYBER 18 MP17 16 KW 128 KW 0.75 μs

Hardware

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The 1700 uses ones' complement arithmetic and an ASCII-based character set, and supports memory write protection on an individual word basis. It has one general-purpose register and two indexing registers (one of which was implemented as a dedicated memory location). The instruction set is fairly simple and supports seven storage addressing modes, including multilevel (chained) indirect addressing.

Although described as a 16-bit system, the basic core storage memory is 4,096 18-bit words, each comprising

  • 16 data bits
  • a parity bit, and
  • a program protection bit;
    memory could be expanded to 32,768 words; I/O was in units of 8 or 16 bits.[1]: p.1-1 

Peripherals

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Available peripherals included teletypewriters, paper tape readers/punches, punched card readers/punches, line printers, magnetic tape drives, magnetic drums, fixed and removable magnetic disk drives, display terminals, communications controllers, Digigraphic display units, timers, etc. These interfaced to the processor using unbuffered interrupt-driven "A/Q" channels or buffered Direct Storage Access channels.

Software

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The main operating systems for the 1700 were the Utility System, which usually took the form of several punched paper tapes (resident monitor plus utilities), a similar Operating System for larger configurations (often including punched cards and magnetic tape), and the Mass Storage Operating System (MSOS) for disk-based systems.

An assembler and a Fortran compiler were available.[1] Pascal was also available, via a cross compiler on a CDC 6000 series host. The Cyber 18 series, exploiting the extended instruction set, ran a disk-based OS, the Interactive Terminal Oriented System (ITOS). This system supported Fortran, Cobol, and UCSD Pascal. ITOS was a foreground/background system with multiple users connected via serial CRT terminals; user tasks ran in the background while the operating system itself ran in the foreground.

Market acceptance

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The 1700 series found use as communications concentrators, Digigraphics workstations, remote batch job entry stations, and industrial process controllers.[3] One application, running the AUTRAN program, controlled water and wastewater treatment plants for many years. Another was used as Maintenance and Diagnostic SubSystem (M&DSS) for the AN/FPQ-16 Perimeter Acquisition Radar Attack Characterization System (PARCS), located at Cavalier Air Force Station (CAFS) in North Dakota; this CDC 1700 is still being used as of this writing (2016).

Washington, D.C. used a Control Data 1700 in vote-tallying.[4] CDC's 1700 was also used by Ticketron as central servers for their wagering systems and ticketing services.[5]

Simulation

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In mid-2016, John Forecast added a CDC 1700 simulator to the SIMH package.[6]

Photos

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References

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