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Anyone recognise these pluggable PCBs?

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austfox:

I scored a few boxes of these pluggable PCBs a while ago. They are all doubled-sided, but populated only on the top side.

I've similar boards used in mainframes. Anyone recognise these ones, and from which computer?

I'm also thinking they might from industrial automated machines or traffic signalling equipment?

SeanB:
I will take a guess teaching logic systems, pluggable boards, into a common socket, all brought out so you can teach logic, and then wire them together with jumpers to make complete demo systems to show how the logic works. Would explain all being 40 pins, and all having common power and ground connections, along with almost all parts being brought out to the edge connector, instead of being connected into more complex logic, except for the LED decoder, which has CMOS inverting buffers to drive them. CD4009, obsolete a really long time, and made by Harris as well, the second source of RCA original CMOS. Normally you would see a CD4049 there, capable of 50mA source or sink, and faster edges, because it has a cascaded inverter and then a big buffer stage, but instead you have the slow single stage pair of inverting gates.

Gyro:
They do look like some sort of modular logic system - probably educational, possibly very light industrial, but definitely not traffic signalling.

DEC (Digital Equipment Corporation) used to have the 'Flip Chip' range of logic boards, which they offered for industrial use but also used in-house for building their early computers and peripherals... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flip-Chip_module, but those look more 'mickey mouse' - large board area for their functionality and not very mechanically robust (ICs socketed), hence the educational / prototyping thought.

SmallCog:
Never seen them before but they look like a possible competitor to the pluggable stuff we used in school

I reckon the description of the boards being printed on them and the socketed IC's are signs they were intended for use in education (easy to ID for students and easy to fix for staff)

austfox:
Makes sense that they are for educational purposes, especially since the components are so sparse and spaced out.

Thanks for all the replies.

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