IIsi: soldered Bank A to high capacity 72pin SIMM conversion study:
Well that pretty much covers funneling soldered Bank A ICs into a 72pin SIMM pinout. Color coding is a bit off with gray Data lines on SIMM meant to be connected to purple Data lines on the DRAM ICs.
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Addendum: forgot to clarify the diagram for anyone interested in a general way.
Bold lines heading down into the 72pin SIMM are the signals that need to be patched from MDU, the IIci/IIsi memory controller.
- MDU has discrete connections implementing Bank A and Bank B for whatever reason.
- buffering of the Vampire Video subsystem would appear to be the culprit from my point of view?
- - Haven't looked at the IIci schematic looking for any hint of that
- - IIsi has Vampire Video hardware buffering of the first __ of Bank A cut out entirely from main memory.
- - - detection of sense lines for video config at startup kicks in the Vampire Video buffering.
- pointing down form the SIMM socket at the soldered DRAM pads would be the bulk of signals required to support easily (LOL!) patched from there using .05 2x5 RA headers upon which the prototyping setup will plug . . . if and when.
WAG would be that during IIci development and the MDU build, Apple had decided to go two directions with Video Memory in the future. Lamed low-midrange products would be lamed by Vampire Video and high end systems would head the VRAM SIMM direction?
TBC?
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Now for the fun stuff! Expanding a 72pin based machine by hijacking the CAS/RAS/Address/Chip Select Lines Apple tied down to that damned Bank A of limited capacity, soldered DRAM ICs.
Example-00
Not sure if I bought this one or not, can't find the dang SIMMspender project box, but I think I snagged it. The Minden Enterprises adapters were especially interesting IIRC. The one above requires only buffering for expanding one SIMM socket into two.
Example-01
Sorry for the crappy pics, I'll post better ones if and when. I have this 1->4 Expander in hand, haven't looked up the ICs, but this one appears to be a 16v8-somethingorother? That'd be a GAL formulation for turning a single 72pin SIMM Slot into four Slots?
The four ICs to is left are 74F32 and the pair on its right are 74F244 buffers as on the twin slot version above.
I'll try to figure out what's up with the camera tomorrow, but here are some pics to start as promised
@max1zzz