CDC 7600 | |
---|---|
Design | |
Manufacturer | Control Data Corporation |
Designer | Seymour Cray |
Release date | June 1967[1] |
Units sold | +75[2] |
Price | $62 - $155 thousands (monthly rent in 1968)[1] |
Casing | |
Dimensions | Height : 188 cm (74 in) Width: 302 cm (119 in)[3] |
Power | 95 kW[3] @ 208 V 400 Hz[3] |
System | |
Operating system | Chippewa, SCOPE, KRONOS |
CPU | 60-bit processor @ 36 MHz[4] |
Memory | 3.84 Megabytes (up to 512000 60-bit words)[4] |
MIPS | 15 MIPS |
FLOPS | 36 MFLOPS[5] |
Predecessor | CDC 6600 |
Successor | CDC Cyber |
The CDC 7600 was designed by Seymour Cray to be the successor to the CDC 6600, extending Control Data's dominance of the supercomputer field into the 1970s.[6] The 7600 ran at 36.4 MHz (27.5 ns clock cycle) and had a 65 Kword primary memory (with a 60-bit word size) using magnetic core and variable-size (up to 512 Kword) secondary memory (depending on site). It was generally about ten times as fast as the CDC 6600 and could deliver about 10 MFLOPS on hand-compiled code, with a peak of 36 MFLOPS.[7] In addition, in benchmark tests in early 1970 it was shown to be slightly faster than its IBM rival, the IBM System/360, Model 195.[8] When the system was released in 1967, it sold for around $5 million in base configurations,[9] and considerably more as options and features were added.
Among the 7600's notable state-of-the-art contributions, beyond extensive pipelining, was the physical C-shape, which both reduced floor space and dramatically[10] increased performance by reducing the distance that signals needed to travel.[11]
gBell.shape
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).