Columbia University Computing History   

Core Memory

Translations  (see below for credits):
IBM 405 core memory The first magnetic core memory, from the IBM 405 Alphabetical Accounting Machine. The photo shows the single drive lines through the cores in the long direction and fifty turns in the short direction. The cores are 150 mil inside diameter, 240 mil outside, 45 mil high. This experimental system was tested successfully in April 1952.


IBM 360 core memory Of course IBM 360 core memory was much more advanced and denser. The photo shows a magnetic core plane of the type used in the 360.


IBM 2361 core storage module The IBM 2361 Core Storage Module housed 1MB or 2MB bytes of core memory, depending on the model. You can see the core planes (and the individual cores, i.e. bits) through the glass doors.


Core memory diagram Core memory diagram, illustrating coincident current selection. The half-select current applied through the indicated vertical and horizontal lines are each too small to switch the cores through which they pass. The one core in the center of the figure is switched, however, by the coincidence of the two currents. A former IBM employee tells me that when IBM first decided to manufacture core memory, they consulted with the Lifesaver company on fabrication methods.


Allen J. Palmer adds (March 2005): "I am part of the Computer History Museum 1401 Restoration Project team (729's being my area for this project). I was looking at your web page on core memory. Do you have a page with the full diagram of the core wiring layout. There were 4 wired passing through each 'donut' -- X & Y plus the read wire which sensed the flip of the core at read out by the magnetic field developed when the core flipped & that field 'cut' the read wire & inducted an 'electrical impulse' which was then amplified and became the 'read out data'. A 4th wire was the 'inhibit' wire used prevent some core from flipping' I have an old 4k 1401 memory core sitting out on my work bench gathering dust for the last 25 years. Someday I need to clean it up & build a case with a light & a magnifying glass so people can see how we did it in the 'old days'."


Source: [4].

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Columbia University Computing History Frank da Cruz / fdc@columbia.edu This page created: January 2001 Last update: 3 September 2023