The following computer models were produced: •
Elliott 152 (1950) • Elliott Nicholas (1952) • Elliott/NRDC 401 (1953) - prototype computer, installed in 1954 at
Rothamsted Experimental Station • Elliott 153 (DF computer) (1954) • Elliott/GCHQ OEDIPUS (311) (1954) • TRIDAC (1954) three-dimensional analogue computer system for guided missile research, built for the
Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough. • Elliott 402 (1955) • Elliott 403 (WREDAC) (1955) • Elliott 405 (1956) (One donated by Nestle to
The Forest School, Winnersh and named Nellie) • Elliott 802 (1958–1961) 6 were sold •
Elliott 803 (1959) about 250 sold, mainly 803B • 803A had 4 or 8 K of 39-bit words of memory and all internal data was held in one 102-bit long serial path. • 803B had 4 or 8 K of 39-bit words of memory. The single data path was split into several shorter (48-bit long) serial paths to reduce instruction execution time. A hardware floating point option was available. • Elliott ARCH 1000 (1962) •
Elliott 503 (1963) software compatible with 803. Costs: 110,000£ in 1963, 4 were installed in UK. •
Elliott 900 series (1963) • For military customers there were four models of the 900 series: 920A, 920B, 920M and 920C. Only a few of the 920A were produced, rapidly obsoleted by the faster 920B. They were discrete transistor machines. The 920M was a miniaturised version of the 920B using
integrated circuits. The 920C was a later even faster derivative built using custom integrated circuits. All were shipped in robust "militarized" cases suitable for mounting in vehicles, ships and aircraft. • Civilian customers were sold versions of the 920A, 920B and 920C called Elliott 920A, 903 and 905 respectively. These were shipped in desk sized cabinets suitable for use in an office or laboratory environment. • Versions of the 920B and 920C for industrial automation were sold as Arch 900 and Arch900 respectively. These were shipped in industrial cabinets similar to those used for the civilian systems. • The 903 was a desk-sized machine popular with universities and colleges as a teaching machine, with small research laboratories as a scientific processor and also as a versatile system for use in industrial process control. It was typically equipped with 8 or 16K of core store and was predominantly a paper tape based machine but card readers, line printers, incremental graph plotters and magnetic tape systems were also available. The machine was usually programmed in symbolic assembly code,
ALGOL or
FORTRAN II. The civilian 920C was the 905, also in a desk-sized configuration. Some 905s had fixed head disk systems attached. A FORTRAN IV system was provided for the 905. • Elliott 502 (1964) • One 502 used to generate simulated radar signals for training operators of
Linesman/Mediator system. • Average system price: $135 millions. • Elliott 4100 series (1966) A joint development with
NCR Corporation. Elliott selling to the scientific market and NCR selling to the commercial market. The 4100 series had a two accumulator architecture with 64 K (4120 model) or 256 K (4130 model) words of 24-bit memory, of either 2 or 6 microseconds cycle time. The 4100 could have a 4180 graphics display terminal with
light pen for input connected. Two larger models were scheduled, the 4140 and 4150 "
Proposals for a large fast computer system which have been presented to the Ministry of Technology and the National Computing Centre, are being announced today by Elliott Automation. The proposal is for two machines, an NCR Elliott 4140, with a capacity of about seven IBM 7090s, and an NCR Elliott 4150 equivalent to about 15 Atlas computers, or 50 IBM 7090s.". The hardware specifications of the 4140 were: 128K of core store (650ns and 350ns cycle time), 24 bit words, page size 64 words, 4 million
drum backing store. It supports batch processing with "
some modest time-sharing" (price range : $1 to $2.8 millions). The 4150 was 6 times larger (price: $6 millions). ==See also==