IBM 308X


The IBM 308X was a line of mainframe computers, the first model of which, the Model 3081 Processor Complex, was introduced November 12, 1980. It consisted of a 3081 Processor Unit with supporting units.
Later models in the series were the 3083 and the 3084. The 3083 was announced March 31 and the 3084 on September 3, both in 1982.
The IBM 308X line introduced the System/370 Extended Architecture.
All three 308X systems, which IBM had marketed as "System/370-Compatibles," were withdrawn August 4, 1987.

IBM 3081

The initial 3081 offered, the 3081D, was a 5 MIPS machine. The next offering, the 3081K, was a 7 MIPS machine. Last came the 3081G.
The 3081D was announced Nov 12, 1980; the 3081K came nearly a year later; the 3081G was introduced September 3, 1982 as part of the initial 3084 announcement.
"The IBM 3081 Processor Complex offers flexible growth steps in the 308X family of processors, between the 3083 Model Groups F, B and J and the 3084."
The 3081 was "two processors in a single box... it was not possible to partition it and run it as two independent machines."
The dyadic concept offers "under the cover" dual processors.

3081 as successor to 3033

Some key technological features of the 3081, compared to the previous most powerful processor, the 3033, were the following:
Both central processors have access to channels, and main memory.
The elimination of a layer of packaging was achieved through the development of the Thermal Conduction Module, a flat ceramic module containing about 30,000 logic circuits on up to 118 chips. The TTL chips were joined face-down to the TCM with an array of 11 × 11 solder pads. The TCM contains 33 metalized layers which distribute signals and power. "A module is connected to the next level of packaging through 1800 pins." The module is fitted with a helium-filled metal cap, which contains one piston per chip; the piston presses against the back of each chip to provide a heat conduction path from the chip to the cap. A water-cooled cold plate is attached to the cap; the water temperature is approximately 24 °C. This arrangement provides cooling of the module heat flux on the order of 105 watts per square meter, which is about a tenfold increase over the 3033
processor.
The internal code name of the 3081 was Adirondack.

IBM 3083

The IBM 3083 was described by an IBMer as "never intended to be built," adding that the 308X was to only be the 3081 and 3084, and that the 3083 was aimed at "the ACP/TPF market" which wanted a "fast... uniprocessor."
Of the various 3083 models listed by IBM in their announcement, the CX has the slowest instruction execution rate.
Next in speed are the E and EX, followed by B and BX. The J and JX are the fastest 3083s.
IBM's information sheet says:
Collectively, the fastest is 2.667 times the performance of the slowest.

IBM 3084

Announced September 3, 1982 and withdrawn August 4, 1987. It could be configured with 32, 48 or 64 million bytes of main memory. A 3084 was "available only as an upgrade from a 3081 Model Group K" with 32 MB.
"The 3084 was two 3081 tied together to make a 4-way SMP."
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