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With the Newlife upgrade the logic board 512K was added to the upgrade RAM, unless the upgrade RAM was expanded to a full 4MB, in which case the logic board RAM was ignored. I don't know how the MacRescue works.The 512 on your MoBo is ignored, or the top end of the four above the floor/whatever. It might be cool to try that board in a Plus if it turns out to be compatible. I'm wondering if CompactVirtual could be persuaded to work in that config, like they used to do for the additional memory slots on some of the later SE accelerators.
The IIsi was released with the LC and the Classic. The three of them shared the cover of both MacUser and MacWorld that month, IIRC. The new models were hailed as "affordable" but I would rather point to it as the beginning of Apple producing intentionally crippled machines -- all three of them. The cost savings were not commiserate with the crippling.The later released IIsi was based upon the SE/30 and the IIci, with which it was released, if memory serves. Could be off on that, check all the intro dates over on LEM for confirmation/refutation.
The Mac IIsi was saddled with limited expansion options, slottage and memory this time, as the LEMacII. It was neither fish nor fowl, however fouled up Apple designed it. [] ]'>
The connection using the Killy Clip was rather delicate. I much preferred to solder on a pair of header strips, the process for which is described in another thread around here somewhere in detail. Searching on trag as author and Killy in the content can't turn up that many posts...FWIW, I just got 2 of these in my big haul of compacts.That "connector" is TERRIBLE. Don't touch it. It's incredibly delicate. Just inserting and removing the board from the case can cause contacts to come out of alignment and the machine to not boot. It's kind of unthinkable that was actually a viable product design.

