PDP7 Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-7 - S#47 PDP7
Australian Atomic Energy Commission - Lucas Heights

PDP-7 S#47 on display in the DEC Sydney office around 1981 ©2009 Max Burnet, click for larger image
PDP-7 S#47 on display in the DEC Sydney office around 1989 - ©2009 Max Burnet, click for larger image
PDP-7 S#47 features in history display around 2005 - ©2009 Max Burnet, click for larger image
PDP-7 S#47 features in Australian Electronics Engineering poster of 1981 - ©2009 Max Burnet, click for larger image
S#47 front view in manufacture. Image courtesy of Computer History Museum, click for larger image
Image courtesy of Computer History Museum
S#47 rear view in manufacture. Image courtesy of Computer History Museum, click for larger image
Image courtesy of Computer History Museum

All photos and pictures ©2009 Max Burnet. Max has kindly supplied some of the write-up and the photos for this page. It's worth explaining that the photos show the PDP-7 after it had been retired from AAEC and was returned to the DEC Australia museum collection. The photos show (top to bottom) -

  1. PDP-7 Serial number 47, On display in the DEC Sydney Chatswood office, dated around 1981.
  2. On display in the DEC Sydney office, dated around 1989.
  3. #47 features in a history display from around 2005.
  4. In a poster produced by the NOP (nostalgic, obsolete products) SIG of the DECUS user group, with its descendant - a UNIX work station.
  5. A front view of #47 whilst in manufacture.
  6. A rear view of #47 in manufacture.

At some time in it's life the PDP-7 at Lucas Heights was hooked up to a Digital Equipment PDP-15 with an inter-computer data link (data). Designed and used by the Australian Atomic Energy Commission at Lucas Heights, this hybrid of a PDP-7 and PDP-15 was called a PDP-22, however this was not an official DEC designation. It seems that several PDP-7's were connected to other computers, indeed we know of and were actually involved in the diagnostics of another PDP-7 link, this time to a PDP-11. This was at the National Gas Turbine Establishment (Pyestock) in the UK.

On de-commissioning of this PDP-7 a short article appeared in Australian Electronics Engineering (1981) copied below (©1981 AAE) -

"Grandpa" retires after 15 years.
The oldest working computer being used for scientific research at the Australian Atomic Energy Commission has been formerly handed back to Digital Equipment Australia PTY Ltd. Dr. J.R. Bird presented the Digital Equipment PDP-7 to Max Burnet, the company's general manager.

Bird, the leader of the nuclear applications and energies studies section, noted that in 1966 it's newly installed Digital Equipment PDP-7 was unique in Australia. Its main role was in association with the measurement of new scientific data. Within a year of its arrival, a young student was exploring the possible application of nuclear reactions for the study of oxidisation processes.

By 1968, the PDP-7 was operating the world's first proton microbeam facility for computer-controlled positioning of neutron counters. This pattern of science and application has continued with increasing diversification up to the present day.

After 15 years and 111,577 hours of operation "Grandpa 7" was ready to retire. The Digital Equipment PDP-7 will be housed in the Computer Museum at Digital Equipment's headquarters in Chatswood. It will complement the present exhibits which include an old PDP-5 from BHP and a PDP-6 from Western Australia.

Burnet thanked the commission for the opportunity for his museum to acquire the only remaining PDP-7 in Australia. He enthused about the "hand wrapped cables and the soldered joints".

In return for the PDP-7 he presented Dr. Richardson, chief of applied mathematics and computing division with a Digital Equipment LSI-11/23. An additional LSI11/23, which will take over from the earlier system, will have 32 times the direct memory capability of the original PDP-7 and an intelligent front end terminal which will handle all the interaction with user and equipment.

On the back of the poster was the following short write-up -

DEC PDP-7 Computer 1964
World's first UNIX machine.
Twenty one years of UNIX software is represented here between the PDP-7 of 1964 and the VAXstation 2000 of 1988.
The PDP-7 was the original computer that Ritchie and Thompson wrote the first UNIX operating system on at Bell Labs in 1967.
The PDP-7 in the poster was the third DEC computer to enter Australia. It was installed at the Atomic Energy Commission, Lucas Heights, on the 27th Jan 1966 and ran for 14 years, clocking up 111,577 hours.
The PDP-7 was an 18-bit machine and was notable for the solidity of its construction - weighing just over half a ton!
The VAXstation is shown running 12 Ultrix windows simultaneously. The VAXstation had 500 times the memory of the PDP-7.
This poster was produced by the NOP (nostalgic, obsolete products) SIG of the DECUS user group. The PDP-7 is now in the BACK museum collection.

The PDP-7 Service list (1972) lists that machine #47 was shipped to the Australian Atomic Energy Commission at Lucas Heights in January 1966 and consisted of the following options -

OptionS#ShipDEC #Notes
34E000002 000000Oscilloscope display
75D000051 000000Paper tape reader
149B00005507660179044k memory upgrade to 8k
177B0000480166000048Extended arithmetic element
444B000051 000000Pulse Height Analysis ?
649000047 000000Line Printer
LT33DB1098700367016229Teletype 33
LT33DB1108210367018174Teletype 33
PDP-7600166999999CPU with 4K of memory

For descriptions of the above options see the full PDP-7 options list here.

The service list is available here (6.5Mb pdf), and comprises the 99 known PDP-7 and PDP-7A systems on the list at that time. 120 systems were built in total, but at this time we do not have any information about the remaining 21 systems or who they were delivered to. The PDP-7 appeared to have sold well into Government research and University sectors with 11 systems shipped to the UK alone, almost 10% of the production run !. Serial numbers are concurrent for both the PDP-7 and PDP-7A so the missing 21 could be either type.

If you know of any information about any of the PDP-7 systems worldwide, location of existing systems, spare parts, ancillary bits, software, tapes or manuals, then please let us know here. PDP7

Documents associated with PDP-7 S#47

DataDescription
PDP-7 - PDP-15
hardware link

PDP7 460Kb pdf
Description, commands and hardware drawings of a PDP-7 to PDP-15 inter-computer data link. Designed and used by the Australian Atomic Energy Commission at Lucas Heights, this hybrid of a PDP-7 and PDP-15 was called a PDP-22, but this was not an official DEC designation. It was used by the Australian Atomic Energy Commission, Lucas Heights. ISBN 0642995230, document in the public domain here here, copyright of this document resides with the Australian Atomic Energy Commission.