RESOLUTION OF THE ISSUE
As I covered in my last blog post, the addition of a braided ground wire with many fine strands was sufficient to solve the high frequency impedance of the ground connection. The board is now solid as a rock.
RERAN CPU DIAGNOSTIC AND MEMORY DIAGNOSTIC SUCCESSFULLY
All diagnostics run clean, thus the memory and indeed the CPU are working properly. I can move back to testing of my Virtual 2315 Cartridge Facility which expands the usefulness of the internal disk drive tremendously.
DECLARING VICTORY AND FINISHING UP THE MOUNTING INTO THE 1130
Based on this, my 1130 MRAM board appears to be working properly. It replaces the core memory stack and associated logic cards that sat in compartment B-C1 of the 1130 system, since that core stack was unrepairable. Three ribbon cables plug into my board instead of into the backplane in compartment B-C1. I disconnected all the power connectors to that compartment, but left all the components in place.
My design includes two holes for attachment of the printed circuit board onto mounting brackets to hold the board inside the compartment. I fabricated something and have the board in its permanent home. It was necessary to remove the top row of SLT cards from the compartment to allow the PCB, cable connectors and FPGA daughtercard to fit within the air plenum at the top of compartment B-C1. I ran the braided ground conductor from my board to the ground bus of the 1130 to shunt any high frequency noise around the 16 gauge stranded wire ground connections for +12V and ground.
The 1130 is pretty insensitive to the noise generated but it can cause the ground of the board to shift a bit relative to the ground of the rest of the 1130 due to the impedance of the stranded wire at higher frequencies. The braided conductor bypasses the stranded wire for high frequencies. I dressed all the power lines to the board to make things neat.
GITHUB FINALIZED
The github repository for the 1130 MRAM substitute project is now up to date with all the files, documents and other information needed by anyone who wants to build a replacement core memory for their 8K 3.6us IBM 1130.
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