IBM Z9 Mainframe Computer Teardown (PWJ31)

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2016
  • IBM z9 mainframe computer teardown. All components explained.
    Technical description: Google for "IBM z9 Redbook". Look at the book for the Enterprise Class model. it is more detailed.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 259

  • @mosipd
    @mosipd Před 7 lety +100

    You know something's over-engineered when a fan is called an "air movement device" -- I'll remember that the next time I get in my fractional petroleum distillate powered latitudinal movement conveyance device.

    • @toinoi123
      @toinoi123 Před 7 lety +3

      FYI: FANs push air, AMDs pull air :)

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +9

      There is no push without pull.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +12

      You got an LMCD? Wow!!! :-)

    • @TheSeanUhTron
      @TheSeanUhTron Před 5 lety +6

      Be sure to connect your Air Movement Device to the Powered Interconnecting Source Socket... Or PISS.

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 3 lety

      isnt that overbureacratic? often engineering and buraucracy are mixed. also army likes to rename common things to more ambiguous ones.

  • @tiagodeaviz
    @tiagodeaviz Před 8 lety +4

    wow, loved that teardown. as someone who loves IBM equipement, i learned the bits of the mainframes. it's really robust.

  • @sapperlott
    @sapperlott Před 8 lety +10

    Great video! You don't get a chance to tear down such a beast every day ;)
    Actually, the Service Elements (the two ThinkPads in the front) are not only used for diagnostic purposes - they run a big chunk of the machine firmware as well.
    Yes - the books are indeed called like that because they are mounted like books in a shelf. Like another commenter already mentioned, since the zBC12 and z13 EC there are no more books and MCMs but rather drawers (guess why they're called like that ;) and SCMs to save costs. Although each SCM combines several of the chips on that z9 MCM on a bigger die.
    All components on the MCM are soldered BGAs (IBM almost exclusively uses flip chip packaging).
    The ESCON and FICON ports are used to connect to external peripherals like storage servers. ESCON is IBM's proprietary optical I/O connector (actually, it's standardized in the T11 SBCON standard). FICON is the successor to ESCON - this time based on the FibreChannel physical layer (and standardized in the T11 standards FC-SB-2 to FC-SB-4).
    Actually, all of the I/O cards have their own PowerPC processor handling the attachment to the mainframe channel subsystem (the mainframe uses channel I/O instead of port or memory mapped I/O).

  • @LukeBarroso
    @LukeBarroso Před 7 lety +35

    sad to see a beautiful machine scrapped

    • @effexon
      @effexon Před 3 lety

      Me too. I'd like these to be more reusable, as "built to last", so modular design, to use parts of it in other uses... same way as people invent new use cases for washing machine engine, car parts and so on. I'd imagine there are use cases for reliable but low performance heavy in eg. non profit scene, but expertise and knowledge is needed. Otherwise closed system sell for couple of bucks in ebay, as those are so nonpractical, only for most enthusiast hobbyists.

  • @KeithDavey2014
    @KeithDavey2014 Před 5 lety +10

    "Dave! My Mind is going.... I can feel it... I can FEEL it!"

  • @stonent
    @stonent Před 8 lety +13

    ESCON is the older half duplex fiber interconnect for these. You could run ESCON up to 43KM! It had a speed from 10Mbit to 17Mbit before it was replaced by FICON. FICON could run up to 100KM at a speed of 1 to 16Gbit!

  • @thorstenoerts
    @thorstenoerts Před 8 lety +2

    Thanks for taking the time to make these videos, it is really fascinating to see how machines in this price class are engineered (VERY well is how :) )

  • @CuriousMarc
    @CuriousMarc Před 7 lety +4

    Great video, impressive, beautifully engineered hardware.

  • @DECcomputers
    @DECcomputers Před 15 dny

    Cool, another IBM Mainframe teardown, great video :)

  • @Liazon098
    @Liazon098 Před 8 lety

    I really like watching this while i do my own work at home. Thanks for sharing

  • @makinjica
    @makinjica Před 7 lety +16

    the whole thing looks like a brand new machine.

    • @RizLazey
      @RizLazey Před 4 lety +1

      Ye thats because the dudes working with these kind of dem stuff always takes care of, hence why they look like brand new

  • @IvanEngler
    @IvanEngler Před 8 lety +7

    thanks for this video. such beautiful engineering.

  • @franzbernasek4058
    @franzbernasek4058 Před rokem

    Absolute Great, I love IBM Mainframe, have learned in early 70 Programming on a System 360/370 , thanks for upload

  • @MohammedAbuObaid
    @MohammedAbuObaid Před 3 lety

    Very nice presentation and excellent explanation
    Thank you very much for taking the time and exerting the efforts to produce this video
    Keep up the great work 👍🏻

  • @davidgustafik7968
    @davidgustafik7968 Před 8 lety +1

    Thanks for the video! It was very interesting. The strange decoupling capacitors you mentioned on the ceramic CPU are very similar to the AVX LICA series - basically it's a very low inductance decoupling capacitor array.

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff Před 8 lety +10

    Where was the DC-DC converter for that CPU board - under all those caps, or on another board?

    • @fromfin90
      @fromfin90 Před 8 lety +4

      +mikeselectricstuff i kinda want him to send that cpu to you to se if you could poke inside it >_>

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety +11

      +mikeselectricstuff
      On the CPU board itself are only caps and connectors. The DC/DC converters for the CPU are on the backside of the system. I will do another video with one of these. They have some interesting specs... for example 1V @ 800A!

    • @stonent
      @stonent Před 8 lety +4

      +chrigel1234 Have you seen the video of the 18 year old kid that bought a Z/890 for $250 and got it working?

    • @jaworskij
      @jaworskij Před 8 lety

      Yes, I'm sure if this guy advertised the z9 on eBay or Kijiji he could get an offer.
      What a waste to send it to the scrapyard.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety

      Yes... and I guess he had not to pay for the transport. ;-)

  • @moshcoffeeBRO
    @moshcoffeeBRO Před 8 lety +5

    just found your channel, great videos!!

  • @Velo1010
    @Velo1010 Před 5 lety

    These machines blow my mind. Just watching this video just runs through my head the brilliance of the team of engineers that built this mainframe. From design of the case to the layout of the individual components to the software engineering. I should of stuck with computer science. I missed the boat.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 5 lety

      You should watch the Z13 promotional video from IBM here on CZcams. That's the newest generation.

  • @RoyAntaw
    @RoyAntaw Před 7 lety +1

    It’s like watching the passing of an old friend. The days of
    Big iron will be missed ☹ Thanks for the video.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +2

      IBM is still building mainframes. See the z13 video...

    • @2hard2knock
      @2hard2knock Před 2 lety

      They’re still around and kicking 🦵

    • @2hard2knock
      @2hard2knock Před 2 lety

      @@PlaywithJunk yep, got one

  • @tomterewhare5605
    @tomterewhare5605 Před 7 lety

    how do you only have 5k subs bruh your vids are solid as keep it up :)

  • @hawkinssherpherd7869
    @hawkinssherpherd7869 Před 6 lety

    Beautiful design, even better than most enterprise systems today.

  • @amrkoptan4041
    @amrkoptan4041 Před 6 lety

    min 23, the CPU socket looks pretty much of an alien technology, never seen one before .. great video thanks :)

  • @aronkelemen866
    @aronkelemen866 Před 7 lety

    Very nice movie!! Thank you for posting!

  • @NightWolfx03
    @NightWolfx03 Před 8 lety +3

    I'd love to have one of those big MCM's for my collection of computer cpus and other neat things.

  • @Gracee40
    @Gracee40 Před 7 lety

    Interesting... I work with newer models but it's interesting to see an older model taken apart.

  • @waltergabriel5501
    @waltergabriel5501 Před 6 lety +1

    Time flies pretty fast in computation. Right now im using a 5 billion transistor GPU, that costs me only 200 dollars.

  • @therealgraeme
    @therealgraeme Před 6 lety

    Awesome video and it was immensely interesting. Saying that, it was like nails scratching on a black board watching you rip that poor thing [of beauty] apart.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 6 lety +1

      I know exactly what you feel. But tearing it apart is still better than just getting it collected by the scrap dealer.

  • @mikeschurai7220
    @mikeschurai7220 Před 5 lety

    Der CPU wär was für meine sammlung😍 .Top Video.👍 👍 👍 👍 👍

  • @zhengchunliu5839
    @zhengchunliu5839 Před 8 lety

    Nice job! I very much like tearing down ..

  • @cncdavenz
    @cncdavenz Před 8 lety

    You must have a good stock of screws. IBM must have had some very skilled engineers back then. Love your videos. Cheers Dave.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety

      +Dave Bassett We have a whole drawer full of exotic screws... :-)

  • @SteveBracy
    @SteveBracy Před 5 lety

    Thank You Sir! That was Amazing. 99.999% uptime

  • @SirMo
    @SirMo Před 8 lety +12

    4.5B transistors.. just as a comparison. Apple's previous generation SoC used in iPhones(A8) has a 2B transistor chip. The new A9x is believed to have 3+. Nvidia's GP100 GPU has 15.3 billion.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety +13

      +SirMo
      Well... we are talking about 10 year old technology. Amazing how fast things change.

    • @lazzer408
      @lazzer408 Před 7 lety +2

      If you look at technology advances from decade to decade, such as 40s to 50s or 50s to 60s, there hasn't been much advancement from the 2000s to the 2010s. Seems like it's just a marketing game now. When's the last time you saw a processor spec advertised in a compute ad? The ads now are simply "Laptop! $229.99" with very little information. Another example are the processor model numbers. No indication of speed is suggested.

    • @bobdvd
      @bobdvd Před 7 lety +1

      One reason is because there is a finite speed that the chips can function at, or rather it gets seriously difficult to get ever greater clock speeds out of computers. Also functionally there is enough computing power in something fairly basic that you can do what average people do with a computer at any clock speed and you don't need to talk about speed any more when mass advertising a computer on TV. Only enthusiasts are excited by GHz numbers anymore and almost no one cares about transistor count in their daily life. I'm typing this comment on a 2011 Lenovo ThinkPad because it does what I need, it didn't cost me much and it is indestructible.

    • @GonG108
      @GonG108 Před 7 lety

      i bet my mac book pro is really indestructible compared with a lenovo , i have one mac book which is completely destroyed from the outside but the computer is still running .

    • @lazzer408
      @lazzer408 Před 7 lety +2

      I have a pile of MacBooks here that look new and don't work. Trade you all of them for a lenovo. ;)

  • @MaxKoschuh
    @MaxKoschuh Před 7 lety

    excellent video, thank you so much. exciting cpu.

  • @DextersTechLab
    @DextersTechLab Před 8 lety +44

    That CPU needs to be mounted and framed

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +4

      I put one in our showcase

    • @romanh2142
      @romanh2142 Před 6 lety

      This is z990 actually not a z900... But it sure needs to be framed ))

  • @DoogieLabs
    @DoogieLabs Před 8 lety +2

    Thankyou very much for taking this apart and sharing it. It's a shame to see it go but amazing to see it up close, I hope to add a fully functional one to the rest of my collection one day. If you have time, could you please take and upload a high resolution photo of the MCM (Processor)? Set on a black background and lit just right, I'd love to have that as my wallpaper.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety

      +Doogie Rick
      Send me a message to playwithjunk at gmail dot com. I have nice pics....

  • @alicewyan
    @alicewyan Před 4 lety

    This is fantastic! Why scrapping them though? Do they have no resell value? I'd love to be able to play with one of these :D

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 8 lety

    They call PCBs 'planars'...
    This thing would had been connected to synthetic AC power, and never directly to the grid. Very interesting that they have separate modules for the system clock. I wonder if the CPU microcode still has to be loaded from the Support Element on powerup.
    What replaced this machine?

  • @Fox420
    @Fox420 Před 7 lety

    31:05
    "i hope you can see that"
    dude i can see the writing on those dies, your camera is badass. are you thinking of uploading at 4k in the future ? your videos and their macro shots could really benefit from it.

  • @wizard-pirate
    @wizard-pirate Před rokem

    I've started using Jiggabyte when among people who know better. I encourage you to continue using it.

  • @alpcns
    @alpcns Před 6 lety

    Incredible engineering.

  • @shmehfleh3115
    @shmehfleh3115 Před 5 lety +2

    Wow. It wasn't that long ago (About two employers ago) I was working on Z9 and Z10 mainframes, FICON storage and big honking 3584 tape libraries. It's not very glamorous compared to VMware server farms, but it has a hell of a pedigree.

  • @DMahalko
    @DMahalko Před 7 lety

    10:19 Those red rings by the fuses are probably current-sensing magnetic field coils. They measure the current flowing through the large flat metal conductor passing through them.

    • @bertoid
      @bertoid Před 2 lety

      Yes, and the flat conductors are current sensing resistors. Belt and braces current measurement!

  • @eumoria
    @eumoria Před 7 lety +3

    19:46 "Everything hyper expensive must use hex bolts" -Engineering Rule. Man I love that sound of cracking torqued down bolts.

  • @douro20
    @douro20 Před 8 lety +4

    IBM has gone away from this type of CP book construction to make the units easier to manufacture. Each CP is now a separate unit which plugs into a tray; no more will you see MCMs in IBM mainframes.
    You'd be surprised how much manual work goes into those multi-chip modules; they definitely did assemble them by hand! They had a special team at the Fishkill semiconductor plant to assemble them; there was no way to do it reliably with machines. Of course they had machines to assemble the chips onto the modules, but everything else had to be done manually.

    • @andrewyork3869
      @andrewyork3869 Před 4 lety

      Impressive, man seldom beats machine now days.

  • @alcampbell
    @alcampbell Před 8 lety +1

    Oh my god, where did they dig this guy up from. LOL. Anyhow I love it all.

  • @RaymondHng
    @RaymondHng Před 8 lety +8

    To think this mainframe was hundreds of thousands of dollars when new. Now it is just scrap.

  • @amdintelxsniperx
    @amdintelxsniperx Před 8 lety +23

    shame to throw it away id love one of these lol

    • @Trowo
      @Trowo Před 7 lety

      chris simmons same

    • @Redicat
      @Redicat Před 6 lety +3

      What are you gonna do with all the throughput processing power? Register every single thing you do on your computer?

    • @wallabismith1598
      @wallabismith1598 Před 5 lety +2

      yea i hate to see such unique systems going to scrap yards... why i dis-liked the video.
      stuff should like this needs to go onto ebay for ppl who like to collect this sort of thing, the biggest thing in my collection so far is a sun microsystems sunfire v880..

    • @cnnw3929
      @cnnw3929 Před 5 lety

      To add insult to injury, I have an AS400 computer that's 10 years older than this one!

    • @Newtube_Channel
      @Newtube_Channel Před 4 lety

      The purpose being?
      You can compose many smaller desktops in parallel and practically achieve the same result.

  • @rabidbigdog
    @rabidbigdog Před 4 lety

    Your vids are fascinating. If you know, it would be interesing to understand what processing tasks these machines were doing? Banking for this one maybe?

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 4 lety +2

      Maybe... I don't know... insurance companies, large internet dealers like Amazon use those.

  • @6pot
    @6pot Před 5 lety

    I dont understand this tech, but the quality of build is amazing..

  • @rty1955
    @rty1955 Před 7 lety +3

    gee, I remember writing software on am IBM-360/30 with 48k yes KILOBYTES of main storage, (3) huge 5 Megabytes of disk, and (8) 9 track tape drives, card reader/punch unit, and a 1403 printer. I used to run BPS and DOS 26.2. To watch a tape sort was amazing. with DOS you could run 2 jobs at once. FG and BG. of course all the software written was in assembler. I loved it

    • @2hard2knock
      @2hard2knock Před 2 lety

      Got work for you.

    • @rty1955
      @rty1955 Před 2 lety +1

      @@2hard2knock oh yeah? What r u looking for?

    • @2hard2knock
      @2hard2knock Před 2 lety

      @@rty1955 Good ole fashion ASM/CICS/MVS stuff.

    • @2hard2knock
      @2hard2knock Před 2 lety

      @@rty1955 Find me on linked in if you’re interested

    • @rty1955
      @rty1955 Před 2 lety +1

      @@2hard2knock sent a connect requesr

  • @Noodleude
    @Noodleude Před 7 lety +1

    oh, its beautiful!!!!!

  • @vitalegvitalegov
    @vitalegvitalegov Před 3 lety +1

    When he dismounted that huge CPU, I've imagined he drilled down to the Terminator's head. 😜

  • @billhershkowitz5759
    @billhershkowitz5759 Před 6 lety +1

    Add some 3390 disk drives, a couple of 3270 terminals, and you have a system ready to be used!

  • @robertwilliams204
    @robertwilliams204 Před 7 lety

    I wonder what the TDP of that monster CPU chip could have been? I like the idea of the replaceable socket as well. Odd construction of the individual pins though. I also would have thought each one would have been spring loaded pogo pins.

    • @ProbablyVoodoo
      @ProbablyVoodoo Před 7 lety +1

      I don't have data for the z9, but I do for the most recent machine: the z13. IBM has moved away from Multi-Chip Modules and towards Single Chip Modules.
      In a z13 EC there are a maximum of 4 drawers, each having 6 Central Processor SCMs and 2 System Controller SCMs. Upto eight 2-way multithreaded cores are active on each CP SCM. The TDP of each CP SCM is just under 300W, with the SC SCMs rated at about 80W each.
      Going back to the z9, a fully-loaded box is rated to consume just over 18kW.

    • @robertwilliams204
      @robertwilliams204 Před 7 lety

      I would have thought as much. Most of everything you need for a system is practically on one die now. However I still think these older designs are a lot more interesting to look at. There's just more that you can see.

  • @MRooodddvvv
    @MRooodddvvv Před 8 lety +3

    WOW !
    that thing probably cost more than i could earn in my entire life...

  • @Killerspieler0815
    @Killerspieler0815 Před rokem

    Good that the PGA spring pins are a separate unit ... a bend pin is already a nightmare on a consumer Intel motherboard , but this would be real DOOM ...

  • @chapzer6686
    @chapzer6686 Před 7 lety

    No idea about main frames but damn does that system look clean

  • @fabioguedes4872
    @fabioguedes4872 Před 6 lety +1

    we have a lot of those older machines running in the IBM data-center in Brazil, we still use some even older S class lol. This is wroth a lot of money here...

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 6 lety

      Too bad that Brazil is so far away... would cost a fortune to ship that stuff.

    • @bbuggediffy
      @bbuggediffy Před 5 lety

      No it would not. Slow shipping by sea would cost ~USD300

  • @ImNotADeeJay
    @ImNotADeeJay Před 7 lety +2

    There is a decent ammount of Z9's still In service for mission critical workloads... these machines age well

    • @andrewyork3869
      @andrewyork3869 Před 4 lety

      What are those work loads that can't be off loaded onto a server cluster? Just curious, my assumption would be VoIP or a massive massive storage cluster.

  • @202Electrics
    @202Electrics Před 8 lety +1

    Is therea modelnumber of that processor @ 31:00
    that thing is sick huge _O _

  • @GSR600Relaxed
    @GSR600Relaxed Před 8 lety +1

    Haha I could tell straight away that you are swiss just by hearing the accent. Greetings from a fellow swiss guy.

  • @DavidDHahn
    @DavidDHahn Před 4 lety

    The processors are snazzy, would love to mount one in a display case!

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 4 lety +1

      I'd say.... if you send me a note on playwithjunk@gmail.com ,then your chances are good to get one. I still have a whole box full.

    • @DavidDHahn
      @DavidDHahn Před 4 lety

      Thanks, sent you an email!

  • @DASDmiser
    @DASDmiser Před 2 lety

    Somebody made off with the two Thinkpad SEs?

  • @CheapSushi
    @CheapSushi Před 8 lety +1

    Thank you for the teardown. Man, this thing is extremely over engineered. It seems mainly just due to IBM wanting it to be too complicated for non-IBM employees to deal with it.

    • @Newtube_Channel
      @Newtube_Channel Před 4 lety

      So many products are over engineered. Desktops and notebooks too especially from 2000-2015+. Only recently we've seen some sort of simplification of design, even then the jury would still be out

    • @bertoid
      @bertoid Před 2 lety +2

      It's about reliability. Banks and airlines for example, want systems that perform very well, but more importantly, they want systems that never, ever, break. For IBM to produce that sort of quality, and ensure that it's delivered to every single customer, they need to engineer the shit out of it.

  • @videosuperhighway7655
    @videosuperhighway7655 Před 7 lety

    We have an operational z9 I guess now I know what it looks like inside.

  • @Fox420
    @Fox420 Před 7 lety +1

    omg the noise those screws make when they unstick is ludicrously satisfying at 19:55

  • @7662Matthew
    @7662Matthew Před 7 lety +1

    How might one get ahold of these machines? If they're only worth throwing away how might someone go about getting their hands on the outdated equipment?

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +1

      You have to know people who work with these machines. One day they will be replaced and then you have to catch the right moment. A bit of luck is always necessary.

  • @olafzijnbuis
    @olafzijnbuis Před 7 lety

    Ca 1985 the had a Data Migration Facility.
    It came in a nice box full of quality control stamps and a manual.
    Turned out to be a null modem cable to connect 2 PC together.
    But way to ask over 100 US$ for a piece of cable and two 25-D connectors.
    When I offered to just solder a cable from parts so we could get on with the job, the customer refused: "we only connect genuine IBM parts...."

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +1

      I'd guess there was also some software in the package? Or only a cable?
      That reminds me when we had a problem with a SCSI device. A DEC technician came to fix it and complained about the "non-DEC" terminator. So I quickly changed it to an original one an the problem was still there. Now he started working on the device...

  • @GonG108
    @GonG108 Před 7 lety

    is donkey kong running better on a mainframe ? and Space Invaders ?

  • @irgski
    @irgski Před 5 lety

    interesting that they distributed 350VDC throughout the system then convert it to the lower “local” voltages.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 5 lety

      It's logical. You save a lot of thick wires if you distribute high voltages.

  • @FennecTECH
    @FennecTECH Před 7 lety

    OH GOD THAT SWITCH BRINGS BACK SO MANY MEMORIES

  • @lazibayer
    @lazibayer Před 7 lety

    What are the MSC chips?

  • @snowenterprise8158
    @snowenterprise8158 Před 8 lety

    Do you still have this computer with you?

  • @JonWhitton
    @JonWhitton Před 8 lety +17

    No Chinese made capacitors on that power board, Japan's finest only!

    • @misium
      @misium Před 4 lety +1

      You sure? How about China's finest?

    • @ozmobozo
      @ozmobozo Před 4 lety

      Sekai ichi!

  • @codebeat4192
    @codebeat4192 Před 6 lety

    Amazing. Why did they throw it away? you must keep the CPU, such a beauty.

  • @techstuff7414
    @techstuff7414 Před 2 lety

    Does your work require you to scrap it rather than sell it? I know that it's too old to actually be useful in production, but I reckon something like this would sell pretty quickly if you stuck it on eBay for a token amount of money. Someone crazy like me would buy it.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 2 lety

      The problem is this... people want stuff like that but when they realize of transportation cost, they suddenly lose interest. I'm in Switzerland and shipping such a beast to USA will cost a couple of 1000's of $$$. I once sold a similar system fully working and then the buyer came with questions of all kind.... lot of work for me... not worth the few bucks you can get.

  • @user-uw1wq9rj8g
    @user-uw1wq9rj8g Před 3 lety

    500 GB of memory from 2005. And now the latest IBM Z15 have 40TB of memory.

  • @ShaneCarles
    @ShaneCarles Před 3 lety

    I'd love to know how much gold could be extracted from those.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 3 lety

      It's not so much more than from a large HP server. But alone the copper can be worth $100

  • @GonG108
    @GonG108 Před 7 lety

    what is a mainframe good for ? ( ism really asking , i have no clue )

    • @Newtube_Channel
      @Newtube_Channel Před 4 lety

      In two years no one has answered your question. Mainframes are no different to modern computers, they're just scaled up in performance and capacity and are based on a distributive architecture which allows it to be used for time sharing applications. Many years ago, mainframes were more relevant as an identity to high performance computing. These days hardware has become more accessible and it's possible to build your own cluster of systems and perform distributed workloads that way. Whether you call it a mainframe or not is up for debate.

  • @enforcex
    @enforcex Před rokem

    Шедевр

  • @RizLazey
    @RizLazey Před 5 lety

    When 3 Phase AC Motor is a freaking computer fan...

  • @CodeAsm
    @CodeAsm Před 7 lety +5

    Sad to see a awesome thing like this going to the scrapyard... but companies do that alott, and selling is either dificult, more expensive and/or the data should be destroyed anyway. still sad to see this die

    • @CodeAsm
      @CodeAsm Před 7 lety +1

      Gold and copper recovery and other materials probably give back more money. But some people like old hardware just to run and collect them, even pay more than scrap metal prices. So yes, old hardware might be not cost effective to keep arround but dont just trow everything away, keep the collector in mind, maybe sell 1 of many servers to some collector and rest for pure metal recovery. Yeah, old hardware waste more power then they give processing power, so replacing them is most of the time smart.

    • @randomcommenterfromdownund8949
      @randomcommenterfromdownund8949 Před 7 lety

      Agreed! More people should think about at least looking for collectors who might want stuff before disposing of it. Speaking of big, special-purpose hardware, I just saved the rolling stock from a 1980's-vintage monorail system from the scrap heap, and also secured a bit of beam on which to run it. I was literally bidding against scrap dealers for it, and yes, I outbid them and got the trains for an absolute fraction of their original cost. (Party at my place, eventually, with one of the best backyard railroads in the world!)

    • @HaraldKubota
      @HaraldKubota Před 6 lety

      The time needed to find someone who can take that thing away is money spent by the company who bought this unit to do something with it. They by now don't need it anymore, and getting it taken away ASAP is their preferred way.
      What happens afterwards is not much of their interrest. They are also not interested in getting US$1000 for this as booking this value is more trouble than worth it.
      Where I work we donate a lot of reusable things. Sadly that's mostly notebooks and desktops. Servers are not wanted. So those are scrapped.

    • @randomcommenterfromdownund8949
      @randomcommenterfromdownund8949 Před 6 lety

      Harald, yup, I've noticed that that's how it works. That's how I got the monorail. The business view is "time is money, just get it out of the way so that we can get on with our plans." That doesn't change that there is value for the community in a better attempt at recycling.

  • @McCuneWindandSolar
    @McCuneWindandSolar Před 3 lety

    You must have a cool ass job to be able to get things like that.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 3 lety

      Many people have access to cool stuff, but only a few make videos about it. ;-)

  • @GenerationAI2024
    @GenerationAI2024 Před 7 lety

    Man that CPU looks great, is there a way to buy such a thing?

    • @FixedFunction
      @FixedFunction Před 7 lety

      Maybe not that specific one but you can sometimes find POWER5 MCMs on ebay. They look pretty cool.

  • @LLAACountyJail
    @LLAACountyJail Před 7 lety

    How much was it?

  • @lotlot6058
    @lotlot6058 Před 3 lety

    Фантастика

  • @henryhallam8163
    @henryhallam8163 Před 8 lety

    /r/popping would love the segment at 23:10

  • @GonG108
    @GonG108 Před 7 lety

    what is a mainframe good for ? playing donkey kong or asteroids ?

    • @rdubb77
      @rdubb77 Před 5 lety

      Processing a very large amount of data at one time; they were and are used for things like airline ticketing...and never crashing in 10-20 years. Supercomputers are for extremely complex calculations.

  • @kidzbopwhitecleanedits8615

    awwww i would of bought it

  • @VelocityTheory
    @VelocityTheory Před 7 lety +1

    Fascinating!

  • @AntonioLima9000
    @AntonioLima9000 Před 7 lety

    I really miss the old days of well constructed devices... 😊

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 7 lety +1

      I know what you mean. It's like steam engines.... :-)

  • @DrathVader
    @DrathVader Před 7 lety

    These days 4.5 billion really isn't that much. A modern mid-range GPU (Radeon RX 480) has 5.7 billion transistors on 232mm^2 chip.

  • @joshstyles4058
    @joshstyles4058 Před 7 lety

    can it run minecraft?

  • @hippo2020
    @hippo2020 Před 8 lety

    assembled in Malaysia, makes me proud of it :)

    • @Gracee40
      @Gracee40 Před 7 lety

      Sometimes, but not always in Malaysia.

  • @MrMiss-cp9bw
    @MrMiss-cp9bw Před 4 lety +1

    25:28 "Now let's do some heart surgery" _continues to grab _*_two wrong sized_*_ tools_ 😁

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 4 lety +5

      Sometimes it's hard to see if a screw is hex or torx...
      Do you know why you get a general anestetic during surgery? So you cannot see their mistakes... :-)

    • @MrMiss-cp9bw
      @MrMiss-cp9bw Před 4 lety

      @@PlaywithJunk haha 😂 sorry didn't see your reply earlier! That was priceless!!

  • @Egress.
    @Egress. Před 7 lety

    why is it junk?

  • @Petertronic
    @Petertronic Před 8 lety

    Looks like a certain amount of over-engineering, like IBM have made it deliberately difficult to service without special tools & jigs. All those big fuses soldered into multilayer board, for example! Imagine having to remove one of those.

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety +3

      +ForestCat IBM has always made their stuff difficult to repair. I remember some power supplies where they used rivets instead of screws just to prevent someone to open the case. But we repaired them anyway ;-)

  • @wngchnKid
    @wngchnKid Před 8 lety

    are the cpu pins/springs pure gold? how much did you sell this for?

    • @PlaywithJunk
      @PlaywithJunk  Před 8 lety +1

      +wngchnKid
      No they are not pure gold. Gold is too soft to make springs or pins. They are gold plated with a very thin layer.

    • @wngchnKid
      @wngchnKid Před 8 lety

      +chrigel1234 thank you.

  • @jamesb8305
    @jamesb8305 Před 7 lety +2

    But can it run Crysi.... Never mind....

    • @Trowo
      @Trowo Před 7 lety

      James B well it looks powerful... even if it's old it can i gess...

  • @DandyDon1
    @DandyDon1 Před 8 lety

    This certainly is no Cray. I also bet there may not be any Palladium in this like IBM used in earlier computer equipment.