Index: en/devices/plated-wire-storage.php =================================================================== --- en/devices/plated-wire-storage.php (revision 472) +++ en/devices/plated-wire-storage.php (revision 473) @@ -15,5 +15,6 @@
In the early 1970s, magnetical core memory was quite expensive and slow. That is, the cycle time (time needed to read and rewrite the information) was quite long, because all information had to be rewritten after they had been read. Semiconductor memory was not ready for series production for a long time yet, furthermore nobody even thought about non-volatile semiconductor memory at that time. So there was a need for a new consistent storage medium.
As a solution, the plated wire was invented, just before the first semiconductor memories were ready for beeing mass-produced, supposed to be a replacement for the magnetical core memories. The plated wire consists of magnetic wire which replaces the cores (see picture at the right).
The installations from the UNIVAC 9000 series (like our UNIVAC 9300) were equipped with plated wire storages. We could offer pictures of our storage units, but the assembly of this type of memory is quite opaque. Therefore we publish self-drawn diagrams to illustrate the plated wire characteristics.
+The installations from the UNIVAC 9000 series (like our UNIVAC 9300) were equipped with plated wire storages. We could offer pictures of our storage units, but the assembly of this type of memory is quite opaque. Therefore we publish self-drawn diagrams to illustrate the plated wire characteristics. +
From the physical point of view the plated wire storage is a thin-film storage medium. The information carrier is a 1 micrometer thick permalloy solenoid film (constisting of 81% nickel, 19% iron) that sheats a beryllium copper wire with 0.13mm in diameter.
Therefore you could save exactly 4 words of three bits each on the pictured detail.