Much to my surprise, there are CAMAC Crates and memory cards on E-Bay. How you 
would use this I don't know. When I worked at NERC we used them for many many 
tasks.
We had a Honeywell L66 running GCOS3. We used these to emulate Honeywell 
RNP707s. These were like 3780's so remote work terminals, printers, punches, 
readers etc.
Some of these were just local to the Honeywell and others were remote......

.. we also build 3780 HASP type workstations, with remote screens as well for 
access to IBM kit elsewhere. Then we had media conversion systems which for 
example we used to read tapes from the various experiments they carried out and 
copy the data to normal 9-track tape.....

Some systems had Unibus PDP/11's. Others had Q-Bus systems. The software was 
built on an IBM mainframe using a PDP-11 cross assembler and we had libraries 
to handle the CAMAC modules. Some systems had PROM loaded cards, others we 
loaded from Paper Tape. Some of the software wasn't reliable so we had to 
re-boot often

Dave

> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk <cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org> On Behalf Of Jon Elson via
> cctalk
> Sent: 01 October 2019 03:39
> To: Adrian Stoness <tdk.kni...@gmail.com>; gene...@ezwind.net;
> discuss...@ezwind.net:On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <cctalk@classiccmp.org>
> Subject: Re: Standard Engineering CAMAC crate controller with LSI-11
> 
> On 09/30/2019 09:17 PM, Adrian Stoness via cctalk wrote:
> > just a box of boards or a system missing a memoru module?
> >
> OK, if you are not familiar with it, CAMAC is a standard for data acquisition 
> and
> control, that has 25-slot powered crates.  At the right edge, the last 2 
> slots are
> dedicated as controller slots.
> This was a 3-slot set that could be used as a programmable controller for the
> CAMAC crate.
> So, it has 3 CAMAC modules, one of which has the LSI11/2 in it.
> But, since the LSI11/2 doesn't have memory on board, and the other boards
> don't seem to have any memory, it seems something is missing.  I think there
> must have been a 4th module that communicated by a ribbon cable across the
> front.  It may still be around here...
> 
> Jon

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