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Anatomy of an AS400 Tuesday, April 14,...

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home about me blog arcadia reading nerdgasm OSes retro computing Anatomy of an AS400 Tuesday, April 14, 2009 During my spring cleaning, I ended up getting rid of my AS/400 model 9404D10 from 1991. Since the power supply is dead in it, I decided to disassemble and photograph the inside of this amazing machine. AS/400s are well known for their legendary uptimes, and were the “jewel” of IBM in the late 1980s to 1990s. In 1993, when IBM was close to splitting up their divisions into smaller companies, Bill Gates said that “the only part of IBM that Microsoft would be interested in was the AS/400 division.” At the time, many of Microsoft's internal systems ran on the AS/400 platform. In the picture at the top of this post, you will see the 6 logic boards (and logic board extensions) that comprise all of the electronics in the AS/400. Each of these boards was enclosed in a heavy aluminum case and inserted vertically into the back of the AS/400 where they plugged into the backplane to interconnect (see picture to the right). To unplug them, you simply had to remove the blue clips at the top and bottom of each aluminum case and slide them out. Each card shown in the picture at the top of this post is oriented so that the connector that plugs into the backplane is always on the left, and the connectors visible on the back of the machine are to the right. I know that others probably like viewing logic boards as much as I do, so I included closeup images of each one below to describe the components.
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Page 1: Anatomy of an AS400 Tuesday, April 14, 2009old-computers.cz/images/doc/intel/cpu/anatomy_of_an_as400.pdf · Anatomy of an AS400 ... Each card shown in the picture at the top of this

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Anatomy of an AS400Tuesday, April 14, 2009During my spring cleaning, I ended up getting rid of my AS/400 model 9404­D10 from1991. Since the power supply is dead in it, I decided to disassemble and photograph the insideof this amazing machine.  AS/400s are well known for their legendary uptimes, and werethe “jewel” of IBM in the late 1980s to 1990s.  In 1993, when IBM was close to splitting uptheir divisions into smaller companies, Bill Gates said that “the only part of IBM thatMicrosoft would be interested in was the AS/400 division.”  At the time, many ofMicrosoft's internal systems ran on the AS/400 platform. 

In the picture at the top of this post, you will see the 6 logic boards (and logic boardextensions) that comprise all of the electronics in the AS/400.   Each of these boards was enclosed in a heavy aluminum case and inserted vertically intothe back of the AS/400 where they plugged into the backplane to interconnect (seepicture to the right).  To unplug them, you simply had to remove the blue clips at the topand bottom of each aluminum case and slide them out. Each card shown in the picture at the top of this post is oriented so that the connectorthat plugs into the backplane is always on the left, and the connectors visible on theback of the machine are to the right. I know that others probably like viewing logic boards as much as I do, so I includedclose­up images of each one below to describe the components. 

 

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The CPU board (Part No. 73F9327) contains an IBM 48­bit CISC CPU with the labelIBM9314 93X0128 PQ ­ it is a blue chip with a white ceramic base.  Very little is knownabout AS/400 CPUs prior to them switching to PowerPC RISC CPUs in 1995 ­ IBM keepsthis information very secret (it’s no where on the Net thatI could find, and I tried hard!).  You will notice that theCPU board also contains 4MB of RAM (the numeroussmall black chips), and two connectors for dumbterminal concentrators.

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 The extra RAM board (Part No. 72X6396) contains 4MB of RAM and connects to 2additional 4MB RAM expansion boards (Part No. 72X6397) for a total of 12MB ofadditional RAM.  Combined with the 4MB of RAM on the CPU board, this computer had16MB of RAM in 1991.

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 The SCSI disk controller board (Part No. 21F4863) connected to the 6 hard drives, tapedrive, and 8” floppy drive.  The gold chip is a Motorola SC81160R20 (a modified Motorola68020 CPU) that was used to perform most of the disk controller calculations (quite fastfor the time).  There is also an external port that could be used to connect anotherexpansion board (probably for external SCSI connections).

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 The Multi I/O board (Part No. 21F4383) is an all­purpose I/O card that can take additionalexpansion boards ­ in this case, it connected to 2 EIA communications adapters (theones with the big silver chip, Part No. 21F9941), and a diskette controller card (the onewith very little chips on it, Part No. 72X6386).  The 2 EIA communications adapters couldbe used to connect to external SCSI devices, networks, or other serial devices.  The goldcpu in the Multi I/O card is a modified Motorola 68010 CPU (Motorola SC81170R10) usedto perform the I/O calculations for the additional expansion boards.

 The Communications Controller board (Part No. 85F7223) is simply an optional boardthat can be used to connect additional dumb terminal concentrators ­ although there isroom for 3 expansion cards, there is only one attached (Part No 21F4867) that has thesame dumb terminal concentrator connector as the 2 found on the CPU board.  The goldchip is the same Motorola SC81160R20 CPU found on the SCSI controller board (amodified Motorola 68020 CPU) ­ it was probably needed to handle all the dumb terminalcalculations if all three  expansion cards were used to connect to several more dumbterminal concentrators.

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 The Workstation Controller was used to connect to administrative terminals and printersusing Twinax (old coaxial­like wire that was heavy­duty) ­ The single brown ceramic chipon this board is and Intel A63652 (a modified 80286 CPU).

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 That concludes the logic board layout of the AS/400 ­ these were definitely well built andpowerful machines for the time. 

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