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Mainframe Computer Component, CG24 Circuit Board, Matrix Terminations

Object Details

Description
In the years following World War II, MIT established Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington, Massachusetts, to carry out research projects for the U.S. military. These included building the CG24, a transistorized computer that could simulate real time conditions. Designed and built in 1956 and 1957, it ran from 1958 until being scrapped in 1966-67. The CG24 was installed in Westford, Massachusetts, to interpret data from a tracking radar on Millstone Hill. Initially intended to track incoming missiles, the radar and computer also followed artificial satellites and measured lunar features.
Some twenty-four components of the CG24 are included in accession 304346, most of them individual circuit boards.
This green board is marked: MATRIX TERMINATIONS. A mark on an attached paper tag reads: Matrix (/) Terminations.
Location
Currently not on view
Data Source
National Museum of American History
maker
Lincoln Laboratory, MIT
date made
1958
Credit Line
Gift of Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory
Measurements
overall: 1.3 cm x 14.5 cm x 16 cm; 1/2 in x 5 23/32 in x 6 5/16 in
Object Name
computer component, mainframe
mainframe computer component
Mainframe Computer Component, CG-24 Circuit Board, Front
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