CDC 7600
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. 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. 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. When the system was released in 1967, it sold for around $5 million in base configurations, and considerably more as options and features were added.
CDC 7600 | |
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3D rendering with a figure as scale | |
Design | |
Manufacturer | Control Data Corporation |
Designer | Seymour Cray |
Release date | June 1967 |
Units sold | +75 |
Price | $62 - $155 thousands (monthly rent in 1968) |
Casing | |
Dimensions | Height : 188 cm (74 in) Width: 302 cm (119 in) |
Power | 95 kW @ 208 V 400 Hz |
System | |
Operating system | Chippewa, SCOPE, KRONOS |
CPU | 60-bit processor @ 36 MHz |
Memory | 3.84 Megabytes (up to 512000 60-bit words) |
MIPS | 15 MIPS |
FLOPS | 36 MFLOPS |
Predecessor | CDC 6600 |
Successor | CDC Cyber |
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 increased performance by reducing the distance that signals needed to travel.