Oregon Status University constructed a general purpose computer (Nebula) in the 
mid 60s that used Corning glass delay lines both to construct a 4k x 34 bit 
main memory with an auxillary 2k Content Addressable Memory with 32 bits plus 
some 'tag' bits. 

Al archived a copy of the hardware manual on bitsavers 
(http://bitsavers.org/pdf/oregonState/nebula/Nebula_HardwareMan_Aug76.pdf).  
This manual doesn't give much detail on the physical hardware implementation, 
but there is design (part of the PhD thesis of designer.)  If anyone has 
further interest, I will do a scan of the 'design' manual which has much more 
detail and some schematics.  I am away on travel at the moment but can upload 
in about two weeks.

At the time I was at OSU, Nebula was one of the fastest computers, measured by 
clock speed (27 MHz) but slowest by instruction cycle time (100uS) due to being 
fully bit serial.  Lots of 1000-series mecl parts to do the 3 nS cycles needed 
for the memory bit times in the CAM but the rest as a mix of transistor, DTL 
and TTL devices.  
-Gary

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