return to main pageSMS - Card "Gate" and Card Comments
SMS - Card Gate
Van Snyder went to visit the old IBM museum in Sindelfingen, Germany. He took some lovely pictures
Of special interest is a display of IBM's standard "gate" for SMS cards.
Card sideThe card side of IBM Standard "Gate". It is 24 card slots wide by 6 card slots high. A few card slots are used to get power and logic connections into the rack.
Wire SideThe wire side of IBM Standard "Gate". The bare wire ends are wrapped around rather sharp rectangular contacts making a "gas tight" metal-to-metal contact. The automated wire wrap machines were made by Gardner-Denver. The white rectangles with many holes are movable guides to aid the trouble-shooter in finding the desired card and connection. SMS - Card Comments
----- Original Message ----- From: E. Verhagen - e.verhagen7 @ chello dot nl To: ed@ed-thelen.org Sent: Monday, March 24, 2008 6:35 AM Subject: IBM SMS-boards Dear Ed, Very nice site you have! Perhaps you can help me. I�m looking for a list with the cardnumbers of the SMS-cards of IBM with a description of their function and perhaps components. Do you know where I can find this information? Thanks and greetings Erik Verhagen The NetherlandsDepends on what you have and want to know about. IBM had several THOUSAND different types of SMS cards used in a very wide variety of equipment.
from Ed Thelen Best I can offer is: http://ibm-1401.info/index.html#SMS-Cards and http://ibm-1401.info/index.html#Components/Devices What are you doing with SMS cards? Anything we can help with??
from Tim CosletLogic families included RTL, DTL, and ECL (although IBM had different names for them); Analog cards came in a very wide variety including amplifiers, current sources, voltage regulators, and high power drivers; many cards were just "resistor packs" or other assortments of misc components. Some cards contained core memory planes or ferrite pulse transformers.
Most cards were single wide. we have some double wide cards in the 1401, I have seen a photo of a card used in the 7030 Stretch that was five or six wide (I don't recall exactly right now). Most cards simply plug into the socket(s) but some cards had attached cables that had to be connected somewhere else.
Most SMS cards run on 2 to 4 different power supply voltages (typically +12V, -12V, +6V, -6V), but some need other voltages and most Logic cards use at least one "Margin check" voltage.
The cards were used over the period of 1959 through about 1971. Over this period the circuits on SMS cards evolved from discrete transistors on the early cards to Solid Logic Technology hybrid integrated circuits on some late cards.
I very much doubt there is anything approaching a complete list of SMS cards anywhere.
Our sources of information have been schematics for the IBM 1620 (RTL Logic and misc Analog), IBM 1401 (DTL Logic and misc Analog), IBM 729 tape drives (mostly Analog), IBM 29 keypunch (mostly "diode packs") and some IBM training manuals documenting a few ECL Logic cards.
SMS card types are designated by a 2 to 4 character code, mostly alphabetic (e.g., MX, CD, ADB, JPH, CQZT, 4JMX). The numbers designate drawing numbers and ECO numbers.
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