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GE 225 Core memory Plane

The GE-200 product originated in the early days of the Computer Department in Phoenix AZ.

In fact, the GE-200 name has been also used for banking products derived from the first GE computer, the ERMA project, General Electric marketed in the early 60s the GE200 Bank Transit system around a document (check) sorting system.

Three variations of the same central processor constitutes that product line sold between 1959 ? and 1966.

GE-225
GE 235
GE-215

The GE-225 was derived from the GE-312 and 412 Process control computers, then part of the Computer Department products. It was designed by Arnold Spielberg and Chuck Prosper, ex-RCA engineers who have been working on BIZMAC. It was introduced in 1960.

The GE-225 was a 20-bits word binary machine with 3 hardware registers not specially designed for business applications.
The instruction of 20-bits contains a 5-bits OP code, 2-bits of address modification and 13-bits of operand address Floating Point is a hardware option. Decimal arithmetic (with 3 6-bits BCD numbers per word , is another option. Real-Time clock, Move command was also an optional feature.

Addition was performed in 36 µs. Multiplication in 288 µs and Division in 495µs

Technology was solid-state (diodes and transistors). A 8K words system contained 1,000 circuit boards, 10,000 transistors, 20,000 diodes and 186,000 magnetic cores.The power dissipation was 16 KVA.

Main memory was offered in 4, 8 and 16K words.Its access time was 18 µs.

Peripherals included:
Disks (MRADS Mass Random Access Data Storage) 98304 words per unit, thruput 62.5Kcps, up to 32 units.
Magnetic Tapes at 200 and 556 bpi operating at 75ips
Card reader 400 or 1000 cpm
Card punch 100 or 300 cpm
Paper Tape reader at 250 or 1000 cps
Paper Tape punch 110 cps
Line Printer 900 lpm 160 columns
Datanet 15 single communication line controller 75 to 1600 bps
Datanet 30 communications processor
Check sorter 1200 dpm
Typewriter 10 cps

Up to 11 devices may operate simultaneously, through independent channels connected to the memory by an autonomous "controller selector". Unit record devices operated under processor control.

Software includes a compiler of GECOM language (a COBOL dialect with many ALGOL features), TABSOL (a language based on decision tables), WIZ (a Algebraic compiler), FORTRAN II, GAP a translator for IBM 650 and LGP30 and a Report Generator.

Charlie Bachmann develops the IDS data base system for the GE-225 before it was ported to GE-400 and GE-600

One of the major initial customers was at Huntsville Arsenal, a NASA predecessor)