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Monday, July 16, 2018

The Macintosh IIfx is a personal computer designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Computer, Inc. from March 1990 to April 1992. At introduction it cost from US$9,000 to US$12,000, depending on configuration, and it was the fastest Macintosh available at the time.

The IIfx is the most powerful of the 68030-based Macintosh II family and was replaced at the top of Apple's lineup by the Macintosh Quadra in 1991. It is the last Apple computer released that was designed using the Snow White design language.

Overview




Fastest Mac in 1991: 68000 Dash 30fx - loud crash - 68000 Inc. Mac IIfx based Dash 30fx hard drive crash. These guys were some of the first and last professional Macintosh overclockers. The company filed for ...

Dubbed "Wicked Fast" by the Product Manager, Frank Casanova â€" who came to Apple from Apollo Computer in Boston, Massachusetts where the Boston term "wicked" was commonly used to define anything extreme â€" the IIfx runs at a clock rate of 40 megahertz, has 32 KB of Level 2 cache, six NuBus slots, and includes a number of proprietary ASICs and coprocessors. Designed to speed up the machine further, these chips require system-specific drivers. The 40 MHz speed refers to the main logic board clock (the bus), the Motorola 68030 CPU, and the computer's Motorola 68882 FPU. The machine has eight RAM slots, for a maximum of 128 MB RAM, an enormous amount at the time.

The IIfx features specialized high-speed (80 ns) RAM using 64-pin dual-ported SIMMs, while all other contemporary Macintosh models use 30-pin SIMMs. The extra pins are a separate path to allow latched read and write operations. It is also possible to use parity memory modules; the IIfx is the only stock 68K Macintosh to support them along with special versions of the Macintosh IIci. The logic board has a total of 8 RAM slots; these must be populated 4 at a time with 1, 4, or 16 MB chips; this results in a maximum memory amount of 128 MB.

The IIfx includes two special dedicated processors for floppy disk operations, sound, ADB, and serial communications. These I/O chips feature a pair of 10 MHz embedded 6502 CPUs, which is the same CPU family used in Apple II machines.

The IIfx uses SCSI as its hard disk interface, as had all previous Macintosh models since the Macintosh Plus. The IIfx requires a special black-colored SCSI terminator for external drives, however.

Models


Apple Macintosh IIfx - Computing History
Apple Macintosh IIfx - Computing History. Source : www.computinghistory.org.uk

When first introduced, the IIfx was offered in these configurations:

  • Macintosh IIfx: 4 MB memory, 1.44 MB SuperDrive. $8,989 USD.
  • Macintosh IIfx 4/80: 4 MB memory, 80 MB HDD. $9,869 USD.
  • Macintosh IIfx 4/160: 4 MB memory, 160 MB HDD. $10,969 USD.
  • Macintosh IIfx 4/80 with Parity Support: 4 MB of parity error-checking RAM, 80 MB HDD.

Introduced May 15, 1990:

  • Macintosh IIfx 4/80 with A/UX: 4 MB memory, 160 MB HDD, A/UX 2.0 preinstalled. $10,469 USD. Shipments began in June.

Timeline of Macintosh II models


Today in Apple history: The ultra-fast Macintosh IIfx speeds into ...
Today in Apple history: The ultra-fast Macintosh IIfx speeds into .... Source : www.cultofmac.com

References


Today in History: Apple Introduced the Macintosh IIfx, 1990 On ...
Today in History: Apple Introduced the Macintosh IIfx, 1990 On .... Source : plus.google.com

External links


Today in History: Apple Introduced the Macintosh IIfx, 1990 On ...
Today in History: Apple Introduced the Macintosh IIfx, 1990 On .... Source : plus.google.com

  • Macintosh IIfx profile on Low End Mac
  • Apple-History: Macintosh IIfx
  • EveryMac: Macintosh IIfx
  • Apple Technical Note DV15 (Mirror)

MACSIMM-A00 - Programmable ROM SIMM for Mac SE/30, IIfx and IIsi ...
MACSIMM-A00 - Programmable ROM SIMM for Mac SE/30, IIfx and IIsi .... Source : gglabs.us

 
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