I've been thinking about this for a while. It's inclusion in the design of the Classic II was a strange choice on the design team's part. No other Mac has a ROM expansion of which I am aware. Making a ROM drive requires making a change to the system ROM itself, so that doesn't appear to be what they were thinking. Although, do you think they changed course at one point and changed their mind, so they never included the ROM drive capabilities in the ROM intentionally? But if they changed their mind on the ROM expansion, why continue to include the option on the motherboard? They could have easily eliminated the jumper on the motherboard by just not putting the header on the board, not documented it, and left it as an undocumented feature.
I haven't been able to come to any firm conclusions on this. I'm hoping you guys will be able to provide some insight or theories that I haven't considered. Ideally I'd like to pick the brain of the person who was responsible for this feature in the first place, but that seems unlikely, especially since I don't even know who that would be.
Having been the driving force behind the creation of the ROM expansion card for the Classic II, and contributor to the design of the only card that has ever taken advantage of that feature, this has been hanging around in the back of my mind for awhile.
I haven't been able to come to any firm conclusions on this. I'm hoping you guys will be able to provide some insight or theories that I haven't considered. Ideally I'd like to pick the brain of the person who was responsible for this feature in the first place, but that seems unlikely, especially since I don't even know who that would be.
Having been the driving force behind the creation of the ROM expansion card for the Classic II, and contributor to the design of the only card that has ever taken advantage of that feature, this has been hanging around in the back of my mind for awhile.