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There's always something to repair - the 1401 restoration team (consisting of retired IBM engineers) is at the museum every Monday doing maintenance. The computers work most of the time, but the card readers take a lot of adjustment and they are still trying to get all the tape drives operational.

One nice thing about the 1401 is the gates swing open for easy access to the circuitry for hardware debugging. This picture from Wikipedia shows what debugging looks like, with an oscilloscope hooked up to the 1401: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_1401#/media/File:IBM_1401_...

The museum has a cabinet full of SMS cards, so if they find a problem, in most cases they can swap out the bad card. The card can then be fixed, usually by replacing the bad transistor.

At the start, fixing all the bad transistors was a huge problem, which is why it took the restoration team 10 years to get the 1401 running. The German machine in particular was a problem because it had been stored in an unheated garage for a decade, so there was a lot of corrosion. Some of the transistors would literally fall apart if you touched them. (This is what I'm told - I wasn't part of the restoration.) The other complication with the German machine is it included the "overlap" feature, which allowed overlapping of reading, punching, and computation for increased performance. A nice feature, but it made it much, much harder to figure out what was wrong.



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