I acquired this board out of a literal pile of scrap that once belonged to an Apollo-Era NASA test stand. Needless to say, it didn't come with documentation (PDF datasheets and QR codes weren't a popular choice in 1963) nor did it come with a convenient tour guide to describe its function. About the only thing I know about it is it looks cool as heck.
A couple other ideas/notes:
- This is a hand-traced single-sided board on some sort of resin-impregnated substrate
- The card form factor with fingers strongly implies this was part of a data acquisition/control system
- Whatever it was, it was important enough to get a half dozen transistors. Might be some sort of amplifier?
- Whoever designed it clearly had the ability to silkscreen, and chose not to give any info.
So what is it? Lets find out!
Appears to be a comparator (CR109 and Q107 are a current drain, Q104/Q105 and Q103/Q106 the differential pair) and a pair of switches (Q101 and Q102) for driving some device.