Two basic types were produced: a floor-standing desk-side tower (IBM 6150), and a desktop (IBM 6151). Both types featured a special board slot for the processor card, as well as machine-specific RAM cards. Each machine had one processor slot, one co-processor slot, and two RAM slots. There were three versions of the processor card: • The
Standard Processor Card or
032 card had a 5.88
MHz clock rate (170ns cycle time), 1
MB of standard memory (expandable via 1, 2, or 4MB memory boards). It could be accompanied by an optional Floating-Point Accelerator (FPA) board, which contained a 10MHz
National Semiconductor NS32081 floating point coprocessor. This processor card was used in the original RT PC models (010, 020, 025, and A25) announced on January 21, 1986. • The
Advanced Processor Card had a 10MHz clock (100ns) and either 4MB memory on the processor card, or external 4MB
ECC memory cards, and featured a built-in 20MHz
Motorola 68881 floating-point processor. The Advanced Processor Card could be accompanied by an optional Advanced Floating-Point Accelerator (AFPA) board, which was based around the
Analog Devices ADSP-3220 FP multiplier and ADSP-3221 FP ALU. Models 115, 125, and B25 used these cards. These models were announced on February 17, 1987. • The
Enhanced Advanced Processor Card sported a 12.5MHz clock (80ns), 16MB on-board memory, while an enhanced advanced floating point accelerator was standard. The models 130, 135, and B35 used these cards. They were announced on July 19, 1988. All RT PCs supported up to 16MB of memory. Early models were limited to 4MB of memory because of the capacity of the DRAM ICs used, later models could have up to 16MB. I/O was provided by eight
ISA bus slots. Storage was provided by a 40 or 70MB hard drive, upgradeable to 300MB. External
SCSI cabinets could be used to provide more storage. Also standard were a mouse and either a 720×512 or 1024×768 pixel-addressable display, and a 4Mbit/s
Token Ring network adapter or
10BASE2 Ethernet adapter. For running
CADAM, a
computer-aided design (CAD) program, an IBM 5080 or 5085 graphics processor could be attached. The 5080 and 5085 were contained in a large cabinet that would have been positioned alongside the RT PC. The 5080 was used with a 1,024- by 1,024-pixel IBM 5081 display.
6152 Academic System The 6152 Academic System was a
PS/2 Model 60 with a RISC Adapter Card, a
Micro Channel board containing a ROMP, its support ICs, and up to 8MB of memory. It allowed the PS/2 to run ROMP software compiled for the AOS. AOS was downloaded from a RT PC running AOS, via a
LAN TCP/IP interface. ==Software==