REY JOHNSON
Good evening. Thank you for the introduction.
Im delighted to be able to spend the evening with you.
Ill be talking this evening about some
of the highlights in the development of the first random access
disk product the IBM RAMAC 350 file The why, where,
when and how of the first disks.
This is the product that spawned the magnetic
disk storage industry an industry that has since come to
generate an annual revenue of 23 billion dollars. I think it fair
to say that the RAMAC 350 has carved a place in history for itself.
I am sure that many in my audience were not
born in 1951 when my story begins. Let me therefore set
the stage for the events, most of which took place in San Jose,
a few blocks from here.
In 1951, San Jose was a city of 100,000 people.
Its economy was based mainly on agriculture. At the same
time, IBM was a rapidly growing company, with data processing
as it main business. Its revenue in 1951 was about $250,000,000.
After IBM had developed two large computers
that were intended strictly for scientific applications, IBM management
saw little evidence that computers would become profitable business
products. In fact, in 1951, an extensive survey of all potential
computer customers yielded statistics that indicated that 17 or
18 computers would saturate the market.
At that time, Thomas J. Watson, Jr., was succeeding
his father, Thomas J. Watson, Sr., as president of IBM.
He decided to build 19 scientific computers. The first of
them was completed in 1952.
IBMs business in punched card equipment
was growing as rapidly as we would build products. Expansion
was in the air at IBM.
In 1951, IBM corporate headquarters in New
York decided to establish a research laboratory on the West Coast.
Research was a term that at that time covered all types of engineering
activity.
The West Coast was chosen because IBMs
customers in the aircraft industry were creating innovations and
modifications that were considered to be potential products.
For example, the first card programmed calculator originated with
engineers at the Northrop Corporation.
The bay area was chosen as the site of the
new IBM research laboratory because it was between Los Angeles
and Seattle, where those innovative customers were based.
San Jose was chosen as the specific site because
IBM already had a punched card plant here, at 16th and St. John.
This plant housed the district manager, an accounting department
and a cafeteria. Under the direction of Roger Williams,
IBMs community relations were very good.
During the first week of January 1952, I was
told of my appointment as West Coast laboratory manager.
I was told that I would have free rein in hiring a staff of 30
to 50, and that I would be free to chooses projects to work on.
One-half of my projects were to be new IBM products and one-half
were to be devices in support of customers special engineering
needs. No projects were to be duplicates of work in progress
in other IBM laboratories. The laboratory was to be dedicated
to innovation.
My first act as manager of the new laboratory
was to rent a building, and the second act was to place an ad
in all West Coast daily papers, announcing that IBM was opening
a laboratory in San Jose. The ad noted that positions were
available for scientists, engineers and technicians, and it brought
in 400 applications.
The IBM Research and Engineering Laboratory
opened its doors at 99 Notre Dame, a few blocks from here, on
February 1, 1952.
I was told that my flair for innovative engineering
was a major consideration in my selection to manage the new laboratory.
During 18 years with the IBM Endicott laboratory, I had had responsibility
for numerous IBM products -- test scoring, mark sensing, time
clock products, key punches, matrix and non-impact printers and
random card file devices. By 1952, I held over 50 patents,
some of them fairly good.
To be given freedom to choose our projects
and our staff made the San Jose laboratory an exciting opportunity,
especially since funding was guaranteed -- at least for a few
years.
The first few months of 1952 were consumed
largely in interviewing and hiring a balanced staff of talented
and experienced engineers, technicians and administrative personnel.
Except for one person from each of our two
New York laboratories, and one engineer from my department in
Endicott, New York, we were under orders not to recruit people
from the eastern sites of IBM. As a result, our first crew
all came from the West.
Among the first projects, undertaken during
the start-up were a non-impact printer, a test scoring machine,
source recording equipment and a random access replacement for
tub files.
It was the search for an automatic random access
system to replace tub files that led us to explore magnetic systems.
In 1952 IBM was producing sixteen billion Hollerith
cards per year. Each of these cards had to have information
entered into it in the form of punched holes before it could be
usefully processed by accounting machines. Manual key punching
was one of the most costly items in customer data processing operations.
In many applications, most of the information in a card was unchanged
from week to week. In a payroll application, for example,
only hours worked may be new. An automatic tub file would
automatically enter status information and the key puncher operator
would be relieved of punching anything but new data.
After deciding that our random access component
was to be based on a magnetic recording system, we proceeded to
explore the most probable magnetic media. We explored magnetic
drums, magnetic tape loops, magnetic plates, magnetic tape strip
bins, and even magnetic wires and rods.
Rotating magnetic disks came out on top in
our analysis, chiefly because of its rotational dynamics, the
potential of multiple accesses and the efficient surface-to-size
ratio.
As time went on, our engineers became inspired
by the possibility of developing a product that gave essentially
instant access to file data, not only when connected to key punches
but also when connected to accounting machines and maybe even
to computers.
Two events in 1953 turned out to be fortuitous
for out disk project. We ended an automatic data reduction
project being done under contract with the McDonald Douglas Aircraft
Company. This released a half dozen talented electrical
and system engineers, who were then available for reassignment
to the disk project.
The second fortuitous event was the receipt
of a request to bid from the U.S. Air Force Supply Depot in Ohio.
They called for a material information flow device. They
wanted instant access to each of their 50,000 item inventory records.
We were simultaneously studying file applications
in wholesale grocery and wholesale paper supply companies in the
bay area.
We pooled these insights and information and
prepared a set of specifications for a general-purpose random
access memory. These specifications recorded in February
1953, in his notebook by Art Critchlow, turned out to be almost
identical to the RAMAC 350 disk file specifications announced
two years later.
Going from the wish list provided by the specifications
to the reliable operating model required solving many technical
problems. With added staff available we proceeded to attack
all key problems simultaneously. What kind of disks could
we use? How could we get them to run true? How could
we best paint them with the iron oxide paint? What kind
of magnetic transducer should we use? How could we keep
the read/write head close to the disk without having it wear out?
And finally, how were we to move the head to any one of 50,000
tracks in less than one second or in one accounting machine cycle?
We proceeded to test out ideas.
We tested the dynamics of rotating disks by
mounting 120 aluminum disks two feet in diameter on a shaft with
about ¼ inch spacers and rotating this array at 3600 rpm.
One test run of this model allayed out fears about problems of
excessive wind vibration, power requirements and even excessive
disk wobble.
However, one problem that turned out to be
quite difficult was coating the disks with iron oxide paint to
a uniform thickness and smooth finish. The oxide paint we
were using was essentially the same as was used to paint the Golden
Gate Bridge. One of the engineers suggested pouring the
paint near the center of a rotating disk and allowing centrifugal
force to spread a smooth uniform coat over the disk surface.
Another engineer found that filtering the paint through a silk
stocking showed that by filling a tray of paper cups with just
the right amount of paint, the coating thickness would be the
same from disk to disk. This system was used for many years.
It was later incorporated into the equipment that automated the
process.
Another group of engineers was assigned to
develop a small thin head for the record and readback functions.
None of our staff knew much about magnetic recording. So
we hired a consultant, Al Hoagland, who at the time was a graduate
student at UC Berkeley and an expert in magnetic recording.
About the only magnetic transducers in use in 1953 were those
used with magnetic drum and magnetic tape equipment. Both
of these had entirely different space and positioning constraints
than we had.
Early in the development of the read/write
head we decided to protect the head against wear by using air
pressure with nozzles in the face of the flat head. The
airflow spaced the head a uniform distance from the sometimes
wobbly disks. Air pressure was also used to force the head
toward the disk after it reached its destination.
Stored bit density at the center tracks was
made the same as the state of the art density in magnetic drums,
100 bits to the inch and 20 tracks to the inch. This was
better than a 4,000% improvement over punched cards in information
density and the data was alterable and erasable.
In our first file model two-foot diameter oxide-coated
disks were mounted on a horizontal shaft at ½-inch intervals.
Fifty-one disks gave 100 inside surfaces. Two opposite facing
heads were mounted on one access arm.. The access arm was
moved so as to place the heads on any of the 100 tracks on each
of the 100 disk surfaces at a speed that would match an accounting
machine cycle, which was less than one second. We had anticipated
that there would be a need for as many as twelve access stations
on each file. A provision that proved to be excessive.
The maximum travel between addresses was one-twentieth of an inch.
Two access drive systems were designed and
modeled, one mechanical and one electronic-servo system.
We finally chose an electronic-servo system for the first file
model.
The tub file application led us to test out
the disk performance by pairing it with a keypunch, because the
keypunch could be used for entering information and for recording
in punched holes the information read back from the disk file.
On February 10, 1954, this first sentence was
fed into and read back from the disk file This has
been a day of solid achievement.
By March, 1954, tests of components and the
card to file machine made us confident of being able to build
a product. Lou Stevens was made the manager with full development
responsibility.
He and his staff of very capable engineers
initiated a program of re-design that started in mid-March 1954.
By November this design had matured into a magnetic disk
processing machine. RAMAC was on its way. Hopes
were high that his revolutionary concept would develop into an
IBM product.
The potential for large random access memory
was attested to be activity among competitors who were using very
large drums, drum arrays, tape loops and even the surface of a
power station fly wheel as recording surfaces.
The IBM vice-president for marketing, L.H.
Lamotte, stationed his long-range planner, F.J. Wesley, in our
laboratory mid-summer, 1954. On October 8, 1954, Mr. Wesley
sent a memorandum, which he called a pontifical announcement,
to his boss. In part it started, we must immediately
attack accounting problems under the philosophy of handling each
business transaction as it occurs, rather than using batching
techniques. Wesleys memo was widely circulated
among IBM management and, needless to say, in our laboratory.
The promise of developing a product for more than a file tub replacement
led to a corporate decision in November 1954 to build at least
five prototypes of our product to field test.
Initial specifications for the RAMAC were prepared
December 17, 1954.
The non-RAMAC projects of the research and
engineering laboratory moved to Julian Street to open more spaces
for the RAMAC team. At the Julian Street laboratory work
continued on advanced ideas for disk files. Gliding heads
and multiple parallel access arms were developed and eventually
transferred to Lou Stevens domain where these features were incorporated
into disk file products that followed after the RAMAC 350.
Lou Stevens and his engineers at 99 Notre Dame
successfully demonstrated and operated the Model II file on January
16, 1955. Debugging of this machine continued around the
clock for months.
Early in 1955, a corporate decision was made
to build 14 RAMAC 350 machines for internal use and field-testing.
On May 6, 1955, IBM held a press conference
to announce that it was bringing out a new product that
takes information from a stored program using a multi-million
character random access memory that makes it possible for the
new system to do a whole job automatically without using batch
processing. On August 25, 1995, the San Jose Mercury
News published a short article while said, IBM plans a giant
new San Jose plant that may employ more than 5,000 here.
The first RAMAC was shipped to Zellerbach Paper
Company in June 1956, by an outstanding San Jose manufacturing
team. Mr. Porter remembers the event.
T.J. Watson Jr., President of IBM, announced
the RAMAC on September 4, 1956. He said in part, This
is the greatest product day in IBMs history and I believe
in the office equipment industry.
The RAMAC was featured in the United States
exhibit at the Worlds Fair in Brussels and in the
United States Technical Exhibit in Moscow. Chairman Khrushchev
of Russia came to San Jose in 1956 to visit the RAMAC plant.
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers
designated the RAMAC an international historic landmark on February
27, 1984.
The first four years of disk file history have
been reviewed in my remarks. In the 33 years since the RAMAC
350 left the laboratory, tremendous advances have been made in
product development, manufacturing and research, as you all well
know.