RCA 501


The RCA 501 was a transistor computer manufactured by RCA beginning in 1958.

History

RCA's pioneering work in transistors in other products allowed its engineers to design the most effective use of transistors in computer systems as well. After three years of development, RCA introduced the all-transistor RCA 501, a medium- to large-scale computer which according to the sales brochures was "the world's most advanced electronic data processing system". It was designed by industrial designer John Vassos, who employed a modular design strategy, framing the computer and its components as a system and not as individual units. He also used color coding to assist the operator to run the machine in an "orderly and fully controlled manner" according to the advertisement.
The Air Force purchased a 501 system in 1959 for $121,698. Other customers included the Navy, Army, State Farm Life Insurance, and General Tire and Rubber Company.
A compatible version of the RCA 501 was sold by English Electric as their model KDP10/KDF8.

Features

The RCA 501 utilized advanced manufacturing techniques such as pluggable card units or printed circuit boards. It also included a centralized operating console, from which the operator could control all aspects of the computer from one location, including starting and stopping of programs. It also used high-speed magnetic-core memory, expandable from 16k to 260k characters. An optional drum memory unit could provide up to 1.5 million characters of storage, and up to 63 magnetic tape units could be installed. The tape drives utilized an early version of data compression, whereby the "data on tape in proportion to the length of the data in each entry."
It weighed about.