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Macintosh IIci Logicboard recreation

max1zzz

Well-known member
Something I have been working on recently:
1704567092461.png1704567126203.png

It's a near 1:1 reproduction with some minor rerouting where this made sense.

Boards are on order, should be here in a couple of weeks

Not much more to say (other than thanks to @Kai Robinson for providing the donor board I used) you have all seen this before :)
 

Phipli

Well-known member
Well, that's everything complete for the retro community. We now have a PCB design for the best Mac ever made.

:)
 

akator70

Well-known member
Well, that's everything complete for the retro community. We now have a PCB design for the best Mac ever made.

:)

Not to derail this thread and the awesomeness of the IIci logicboard news, but which logicboards are done? I know of:
  • SE
  • SE/30
  • Classic
  • (and now) IIci
Are there others?
 

GRudolf94

Well-known member
Why the best Mac ever?
A few of us, I would think, agree that the IIci/cx is the turning point where Apple got the design right for a mostly one-size-fits-all computer. They have good basic features, are expandable in a few ways, were not eye-wateringly expensive (looking at you, IIfx), etc.

It's not the fastest Mac, but it's a tidy machine.

@max1zzz props!
 

akator70

Well-known member
Why the best Mac ever?

I'd say the IIci is definitely one of the best. It was attractively designed, expandable, and powerful enough to do a ton of stuff in its heyday. Even years later, when there were faster machines out there, the IIci was still in use by many design houses.
 

Arbee

Well-known member
Other '030 Macs did specific things better, but as a total package the IIcx/IIci are great machines. The IIvx was great on pricing and had non-vampire onboard video, but the case isn't as nice.
 

Phipli

Well-known member
Why the best Mac ever?
Yeah, the IIci was the point that they made a computer that I don't have anything at all to complete the sentence "it's a good machine but it is a shame it doesn't..." Other than retrospectively wishing for faster CPUs. Even then, it was the first easily at home upgradable Mac (the SE was allegedly a "do not open" safety screw case, and pulling socketted CPUs isn't without risks). It is the first properly 32bit box, easily upgradable to 128MB RAM, the onboard video was pretty good (and if it wasn't enough there were nubus slots).

They were just an excellent workhorse. Sold in huge numbers for a long run, and were often in use well into the 2000s.

An excellent photo editing rig, audio/music rig, page layout, research, server (AUX), etc etc etc.
 

Phipli

Well-known member
I actually wouldn't say I have the same feelings about the IIcx - the dirty ROM and requirement for a video card, plus 16MHz and a lack of a PDS. There is quite a list of ways that it is less good.
 

Phipli

Well-known member
The IIvx was great on pricing and had non-vampire onboard video, but the case isn't as nice.
Only after the price drop (if even then) - initially it was inexcusably expensive for a machine that was effectively the same speed as a 4 year old Mac.
 

max1zzz

Well-known member

LaPorta

Well-known member
Interestingly, for all the praise this machine is getting…I’ve never used, owned, or even seen one in real life before.
 

Melkhior

Well-known member
It's a near 1:1 reproduction with some minor rerouting where this made sense.
Another awesome piece of work :) Pure tracing, or is there some associated schematics? Been working on those, but it's not moving very fast...

I have a bombed IIci that could use one of those replacement board, if someone could do the transplant in Europe for me (I suck at soldering anything finer than 1.27mm TH, and even at that I'm not very good).,

However, I don't like the cache slot. With schematics, it should be reasonably easy (famous last words!) to rewire it in a 'true' PDS'030 compatible with the SE/30 and IIsI (guess why :)). As far as I can tell, all other parts have the wiring for the interrupts of the missing 2 slots (video uses one, I believe). Also, perhaps those 30-pins SIMM could be replaced by a pair of space-saving 72-pin SIMMs. And that 10-pins power connector is useless with all the dying PSU, might as well put some ATX in there straight away...

It feels like purists are going to scream at me for daring to suggest 'fixing' the IIci :)
 
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