Not really - I worked on a DSP with 9-bit bytes in the 90's (largely because it was focused on MPEG decode for DVDs, new at the time) largely because memory was still very expensive and MPEG2 needed 9-bit frame difference calculations (most people do this as 16-bits these days but back then as I said memory was expensive and you could buy 9-bit parity RAM chips)
It had 512 72-bit registers and was very SIMD/VLIW, was probably the only machine ever with 81-bit instructions
It had 512 72-bit registers and was very SIMD/VLIW, was probably the only machine ever with 81-bit instructions