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IBM 350
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- Model 1 announced September 4, 1956
- Model 2 announced May 5, 1958
- Models 3 & 4 announced September 15, 1958
- Models 11, 12, 13 & 14 announced January 12,
1959
- All models withdrawn August 18, 1969
The IBM 350 Disk Storage was a major component of the
IBM 305 RAMAC (Random Access Memory Accounting) system,
introduced in September
1956.

IBM 305 RAMAC
The 305 was a flexible, electronic, general purpose
data processing machine that enabled businesses to record
transactions as they occurred and concurrently reflect
each entry in affected accounts. It maintained records
on a real-time basis, provided random access to any
record, eliminated peak loads, and could simultaneously
produce output by either print or punched cards.
The 305 system consisted of the IBM 305 Processing
Unit (containing the magnetic process drum, magnetic
core register and electronic logical and arithmetic
circuits), the IBM 370 Printer (an 80-position serial-output
printer with tape control carriage), the IBM 323 Card
Punch (similar to the IBM 523 Gang Summary Punch, providing
for 80 columns of output punching), the IBM 380 Console
(containing the card feed, typewriter, keyboard and
indicator lights and control keys), the IBM 340 Power
Supply (supplying power for all components except the
motors in the 350 disk storage unit), a utility table
adjacent to the console, and the IBM 350 Disk Storage
Unit.
The 350 Disk Storage Unit consisted of the magnetic
disk memory unit with its access mechanism, the electronic
and pneumatic controls for the access mechanism, and
a small air compressor. Assembled with covers, the 350
was 60 inches long, 68 inches high and 29 inches deep.
It was configured with 50 magnetic disks containing
50,000 sectors, each of which held 100 alphanumeric
characters, for a capacity of 5 million characters.
Disks rotated at 1,200 rpm, tracks (20 to the inch)
were recorded at up to 100 bits per inch, and typical
head-to-disk spacing was 800 microinches. The execution
of a "seek" instruction positioned a read-write
head to the track that contained the desired sector
and selected the sector for a later read or write operation.
Seek time averaged about 600 milliseconds.
In 1958, the 305 system was enhanced to permit an optional
additional 350 Disk Storage Unit, thereby doubling storage
capacity; and an additional access arm for each 350.

The dual arms used to record or
read data from the 350 disk storage unit.
With storage capacities of 5 million and 10 million
digits, and the capability to be installed either singly
or in pairs, the 350 provided the 305 system with storage
capacities of 5, 10, 15 or 20 million characters.
More than 1,000 305s were built before production ended
in 1961. The 305 RAMAC was one of the last vacuum tube
systems designed in IBM.
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