> From: Paul Koning > FWIW, I have always heard 11/05 and 11/40 respectively.
Good to know that others have the same vibe that I do. > From: Bill Degnan > putting all of that original 11/10 stuff aside :-) :-) > There is a version of the processor handbook with all 4, and there is a > version with just 11/40. I have never seen a processor handbook for > just the 11/35, 11/05, or 11/10 by itself. Good point. BTW, there's often some confusion; some people think the 11/05-10 was the second PDP-11. It wasn't, it's the fourth, and those processor handbooks confirm that. The first 11/45 one is dated 1971, the 11/40 one is 1972, and the one with the four is 1973. > I always treated the 11/05 and 11/10 as separate machines, just as much > as the 11/05 S and 11/05 NC. Can you please remind me again what the differences with the 11/05NC are? I remembered we discussed it, but I'm too lazy to dig through the list archives for it. As far as I know, the original 11/05 and original 11/10 differ only in i) the number on the front, and ii) what options were standard/offered in each; the hardware is entirely identical. > Not sure if there is an 11/10 model S or NC. There is definitely an 11/10S (again, identical internally, AFAIK, to the 05S - the DEC manual for the 05S-10S says exactly that). > From: Paul Anderson > The 11/05 and 11/10 .. use about 6 different backplanes, most of then > listed in the Unibus Troubleshooting Guide. I know of 3, will have to look there to see what else it says. > A lot of people have gotten into trouble thinking all the backplanes > were the same. Yes! I know of two for the 11/05-10: one holds one MM11-L, with four SPC slots; one holds two MM11-L's, with only a single SPC slot. The 11/05S-10S have a different backplane which holds a single MM11-U, and has 3 SPC slots. Needless to say, trying to plug an SPC board into a memory slot, etc will lead to tears (and probably smoke, too... :-) Noel