The Space Shuttle could hold a flying laboratory called Spacelab in its cargo bay. Three French-made computers ran Spacelab. I opened up a Spacelab computer and found that instead of a microprocessor, it is built from a multitude of simple chips. Let's take a closer look at the computer...
The Arithmetic/Logic Unit (ALU) is the heart of a computer, performing arithmetic. The ALU is a tiny part of a modern processor, but it occupied three circuit boards in the Spacelab computer. The larger chips are '181 ALU chips, each adding four bits; 8 chips let you add 32 bits.
The boards need a lot of chips because a chip didn't do much back then. Even the ALU chips had just 170 transistors. Multiplexers (mux) select which inputs to add, registers hold temporary values, and logic gates (NAND, inverters) tie things together.
This circuit board had a few bugs, which were fixed on the back with yellow "bodge" wires.
Around 1991, the Spacelabe computers were upgraded, replacing the French Mitra 125 MS computers with more powerful IBM-made AP-101SL computers. The new computers still used simple ICs, but the "flat-pack" ICs were packed more densely. They also used semiconductor memory instead of magnetic core.