SMS SIGNAL CONNECTIONS USING PADDLE CARDS
IBM had developed standards they used to build computers in the 1950s and early 1960s, starting with the IBM 7030 - Stretch - computer and including all of their transistorized 70xx and 14xx systems and spinoffs. The cards that implemented the logic had discrete components such as transistors mounted on printed circuit boards with thirteen contact pads on the edge that fit into sockets on the backplane of the computer.
The contacts are labeled with letters from A to R. IBM skipped letters I and O as these were easy to confuse with the digits 1 and 0 particularly with the low resolution printers of the era, thus A B C D E F G H J K L M N P Q R are the contact names. The contacts are all on one side of the PCB.
A mainframe of the era involved multiple backplanes (gates) which had to be interconnected by cables. A backplane from the 1401 holds six rows by 26 columns of sockets, thus can fit up to 156 cards. The backplane used wirewrap on the back to connect the pins of the 156 sockets together. Some of the card slots are used to connect cables which route signals between backplanes.
A version of an SMS card that has the thirteen contacts but is used to connect wires from a cable instead of components is called a paddle card. These are inserted into a socket to hook the cable to the backplane. A cable therefore typically had paddle cards on each end, plugging into different gates.
When IBM moved to the next generations of computers, such as the Solid Logic Technology (SLT) used with S/360 and 1130 systems beginning in 1964-1965, the leveraged some peripherals and components from the earlier SMS generation. Thus, inside an 1130 system, there are spots where SMS cards, sockets and paddle cards can be found. These include both power supply technologies and older peripherals attaching to the new SLT systems.
For example, the console printer (1052) of the 1130 and 360 systems attaches via SMS paddle cards into a block of SMS sockets inside the new system, as does the 1627 plotter, and the 1055 paper tape punch. In S/360, devices like the 1403 printer leveraged many SMS cards to control the printer thus SMS gates and sockets were folded into some frames.
GENDER - SOCKETS VS PADDLE CARDS
There were situations in the SMS era where two cables had to be plugged together, for example when two independent frames holding gates were put together during installation in a customer location. A dual sided socket was created that was not mounted in a gate(backplane) but mounted near the interface between the two frames. A paddle card is plugged into each side, one cable from each frame, to join the two together.
In essence, a paddle card plugged into one of these adapters creates the equivalent of a socket. Inside the 1130, a row of these adapters are used to accept the SMS paddle cards from the older peripherals, leveraging hybrid cables inside the 1130 having an SLT connector on one side and an SMS paddle card on the other.
The supply of these adapters, as well as of SMS sockets as used on a backplane, is extraordinarily limited. I own two sockets and can borrow an adapter from my own 1130 by disabling the console printer temporarily.
The reason that this matters is that when IBM built the 1052 console printer, they have two signal cables, but only one has an SMS paddle card on the end. The other signal cable has a special SMS socket, much rarer than adapters or sockets. When I built my 1052 Emulator box, I used SMS paddle cards for both signal cables because that was all I had available.
This means that I need to use a borrowed adapter to convert one of them into a socket to connect to my 1130. The 1130 only has one gender changer/adapter for the 1052, the other space requires the cable socket from the 1052 be used. Hooking up my emulator ties up the borrowed adapter, which is not a workable situation for when I want to loan the 1052 Emulator to others. I therefore need to modify one of my signal cables to have an SMS socket on the end.
CREATING MY SOCKET TO BUILD A CABLE
I had previously designed and built a few PCBs that create an SMS paddle card to which I can connect wiring. Recently I developed a housing that could convert one of those (male) paddle cards into a (female) socket. The first sample of the housing arrived yesterday and I assembled it with one of my paddle cards to test out the mating effectiveness.
This card implements the 13 contacts, with holes to solder wiring from a cable. It was created with four holes where bolts and nuts can be used to attach it to something.
This holder can attach the SMS paddle card PCB using bolts and nuts. If I solder a spring contact, an RF shield finger, onto each of the pads, it creates a means for another SMS paddle card to be inserted and make good contact with the newly created socket. I added notches on the sides to mount this in the slots in the 1130 where the gender adapters or cable sockets are held.
It turns out my design for the holder is not perfect. I had to do some improvising with a Dremel tool and drill some new holes, as well as cut notches in the SMS paddle card PCB with the shields on it, but I was able to assemble a working socket.
SMS SIGNAL SOCKET MADE FOR PF2 CABLE
The second signal cable from the 1052 typewriter (console printer) has a female SMS connector on it, rather than a paddle card. I built an equivalent socket and wired it up. A quick final check on the 1130 verified that the cables work properly
PACKING THE EMULATOR UP TO LEND TO SYSTEM SOURCE MUSEUM
I completed an installation and operations manual as part of the github repository for the project and provided the document along with the necessary files (APL 385 Unicode font) to help them get this operational as quickly as possible.
The 1053 Emulator will be on long term loan to the Systems Source Museum since they frequently demonstrate the 1130 system and the 1053 console printer is the most fragile part of the system. This gives them an alternate way to allow visitors to interact with the IBM 1130 without chewing through boxes of special paper.






