IBM 2790

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The IBM 2790 Data Communications System is a family of devices intended for "in-plant data communications and production monitoring." [1] It is described as a two-way data communications system designed to accommodate large volumes of short messages from many in-plant locations or from smaller groups of terminals at remote locations. [2]

The 2790 consists of one IBM 2715 Transmission Control Unit, or an IBM 1800 Data Acquisition and Control System, [3] which controls the other system components. The 2715 supports up to 32 KB of magnetic core memory with a 1.2 μs cycle time, an internal disk for microcode load, a 2740 printer/keyboard, and a real time clock. [4] The 2715 provides terminal control, transaction assembly, data-entry checking, message routing, transaction storage, and transfer of data to and from a System/370, IBM 1800 Data Acquisition and Control System or an IBM System/7.

The 2715 supports a mix of other devices, all connected by a two-wire loop operating at 500 kbit/s. [4] There are numerous data entry devices that can be attached:

References

  1. 1 2 IBM Corporation. Customer Engineering Announcement: The IBM 2790 Data Communication System (PDF).
  2. IBM System/370 System Summary (PDF). IBM. 1976. pp. 8–26.
  3. Systems Reference Library IBM 2790 Data Communication System Component Description (PDF). IBM Corporation. July 1969. p. 5. Retrieved November 17, 2025.
  4. 1 2 Hippert, R. O. (November 1970). "IBM 2790 Digital Transmission Loop". IBM Journal of Research and Development. 14 (6): 662–667. doi:10.1147/rd.146.0662. ISSN   0018-8646.