IBM 603


The IBM 603 Electronic Multiplier was the first mass-produced commercial electronic calculating device; it used vacuum tubes to perform multiplication and addition. The IBM 603 was adapted as the arithmetic unit in the IBM Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator. It was designed by James W. Bryce, and included circuits patented by A. Halsey Dickenson in 1937.
The IBM 603 was developed in Endicott, New York, and announced on September 27, 1946.
Only about 20 were built since the bulky tubes made it hard to manufacture, but the demand showed that the product was filling a need.
The IBM 603 was the predecessor of the IBM 604, a programmable device with more complex capabilities. The 604 used miniature tubes and a patented design for pluggable modules, which made the product more easily manufactured and serviced.