Robotron K 1840

Robotron RVS K 1840 in the Technische Sammlungen Museum, Dresden

The K 1840 was a minicomputer from the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Its full name is "RVS K 1840" (RVS stands for Rechnersystem mit virtuellem Speicher  "computer system with virtual memory"). Its development began in August 1985 at VEB Robotron Elektronik in Dresden, and it went into production in 1988.

The K 1840 minicomputer was a clone of VAX-11/780 from Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC). The export of western 32-bit minicomputers to Comecon countries was forbidden by the CoCom technology embargo. Therefore one had to be developed locally, using computer Aided Design technology based on a 32-bit computer architecture.

The K 1840 was the first 32-bit computer of the M 32 VAX-compatible minicomputer line. Copies of VAX-11/7xx computers are known also from Czechoslovakia (CM 5152[1]), Hungary (TPA-11/540, 560 and 580[2]), Romania (CORAL 8730) and the Soviet Union (CM 1700[3]).

K 1840 had a maximum computing speed of 1.1 MIPS; it could access up to 16 MB of main memory and up to 4 GB of virtual memory.

The first prototype with the essential core components was introduced in April 1987, and five more were built from then until September 1987. The new computer was presented to the public in October 1987. In 1988 it was awarded the National Prize of the GDR, 1st class, and a gold medal at the Leipzig spring fair. Production started in June 1988 and 217 machines were delivered at a price of 1.9 million Mark up to 1990.

While the K 1840 was under development, its successor (the K 1845, based on the VAX 11/785) had already been conceived. The K 1845 was presented to the public at the Leipzig spring fair in 1990. It had a bigger main storage capacity (up to 64 MB) and could handle a bigger number of bus adaptors and controllers than its predecessor. Twenty prototypes were built.

A further successor was contemplated: the K 1850, with a performance of 6 MIPS, using ECL gate arrays.

Robotron developed a copy of the MicroVAX II called the K 1820, which reached approximately 90% of the performance of the K 1840. The K 1820 was fully compatible with the software of the K 1840, so that already-developed system and application software could be used.

In mid-1990, production of the K 1840 and K 1845 and all development work stopped, because economical production was not feasible under free-market conditions resulting from the currency, economic and social union of East and West Germany on 1 July 1990, causing the collapse of Robotron's traditional markets in the Soviet Union and East Europe.

There are K 1840s in the Technische Sammlungen Museum in Dresden, in the Konrad-Zuse-Computermuseum in Hoyerswerda and in the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, USA.[4]

Notes

  1. Dujnic, J.; Fristacky, N.; Molnar, L.; Plander, I.; Rovan, B.: "On the history of computer science, computer engineering, and computer technology development in Slovakia". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 38-48, July-Sept. In 1999
  2. The KFKI (Central Research institutes for Physics Budapest) TPA series
  3. Laimutis Telksnys, Antanas Zilinskas: "Of computer in Lithuania". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 31-37, July-Sept. In 1999
  4. Accession Number 102678345 of the Computer History Museum

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, October 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.