There are probably many more, but here are some known machines using these parts: • The
Apollo Computer Tern family: DN460, DN660 and DSP160. All used the same system board emulating the
Motorola 68010 instruction set. • The
Itek Advanced Technology Airborne Computer (ATAC) used on the
Galileo Attitude and Articulation Control Computer System and some Navy aircraft had a 16-register, 16-bit word width assembled from 4-bit-wide 2900 series processors. Four special instructions were added to the Galileo version of the ATAC, and later some chips were replaced with
radiation-hardened 2901 chips. •
Data General Nova 4, which obtained 16-bit word width using four Am2901 ALUs in parallel. The floating point board has 15 Am2901 ALUs on it. •
Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC)
PDP-11 models PDP-11/34 FP11-A and PDP-11/44 FP11-F floating-point options. • The DEC
VAX 11/730, which used eight Am2901s in the CPU. •
Hewlett-Packard 1000
A-series model A600 used four Am2901 ALUs for its 16-bit processor • The Xerox Dandelion, the machine used in the
Xerox Star and Xerox 1108
Lisp machine. • Several models of the
GEC 4000 series minicomputers: 4060, 4150, 4160 (four Am2901 each, 16-bit ALU), and 4090 and all 418x and 419x systems (eighteen Am2901 each, 32-bit integer ALU or 8-bit exponent, 64-bit Double Precision floating point ALU). • The DEC KS10
PDP-10 model. • The
UCSD Pascal P-machine processor designed at NCR by
Joel McCormack. • A number of
MAI Basic Four machines. • The
Tektronix 4052 graphics system computer. • The
SM-1420, Soviet clone of PDP-11, used Soviet clone of Am2901 (4 ICs in the CPU and 16 ICs in the FPU) perhaps also used in others. • The
Lilith computer designed at
ETH Zürich by
Niklaus Wirth. •
Atari's
vector graphics arcade machines
Red Baron,
Battlezone, and
Tempest each used four Am2901 ICs in their "math box" auxiliary circuit boards. •
Atari's
raster graphics arcade machine
I, Robot, the first commercial game featuring filled polygons, included a math processor built around four Am2901 chips. •
Pixar Image Computer, 4 Channel Processors each with 4 Am2900's •
Eventide H949 Harmonizer; four Am2901 chips (and several microcode PROMs) are used to generate addresses and generate reference voltages for the DAC system audio was not processed in the 2901 ALU section. • Many
Siemens Teleperm and S5
PLCs used for industrial control were built using the 2900 series. • The
AT&T 3B20D used eight Am2901's in its ALU. •
Geac Computer Corporation 2000, 6000, 8000, and 9000 were all based on 4 x Am2901 chips. The GEAC 9500 was based on the Am29101. The GEAC 2000 was used in pharmacies. The other models were used in library, banking, and insurance automation. The 2000 was a single processor unit. The 6000 and 8000 contained four processors, each dedicated to one of comms, disk, tape, or program processing. The 8000 had local processor memory whereas the 6000 did not. The 9000 and 9500 were AMP systems with up to 8 CPU modules. • Later iterations of the
Ferranti Argus 700 e.g. the 700F and 700G, used Am2901 devices, as did as some of the A700 peripheral channel controllers for e.g. hard and floppy disc drives • The
High Level Hardware Limited Orion, a user-microcodable minicomputer running Unix. • The 168/E, developed in the late 1970s at the
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory to execute a subset of the IBM 360/370 instructions. •
Warrex Centurion, an 8-bit minicomputer built by
Warrex Computer Corporation (later just Centurion), a Texas based company from the late 1970s to the 1980s. The Am2909 and Am2911 microprogram sequencers and the Am2901 ALU were used in the CPU6 variant. • The
PerkinElmer Computer Systems Division utilized Am2900 devices in the ALU of their 3200 series supermini computers. • The second-generation 16-bit CPU of the NCR I-8250 family of accounting-computers, which replaced the earlier 605-model 4-board CPU that used discrete 7400-series TTL chips. • The
Chyron IV
character generator from 1977, used for on-screen titling and credit rolls in television broadcasting and video post-production, was designed using four Am2900 ALUs for its CPU design. This design was used to emulate the functionality of the DataMate-70 minicomputer which was used by the earlier Chyron II CG for its processor, to provide compatibility between the Chyron II and the IV's processor codebase. • The
Prime Computer P300 was built using Am2900 devices. == Members of the Am2900 family ==