compressed news on a 7300 with 512K RAM
Thad P Floryan
thad at cup.portal.com
Sun Jul 2 10:32:28 AEST 1989
Regarding upgrading the memory of a 512KByte motherboard 7300 ...
So far I've upgraded one of my three 7300s. I chose to upgrade the motherboard
myself since I have the tools and experience to do it properly. Even then, it
took ~12 hours and IS tedious.
The parts required to upgrade my 7300 were:
1 74F258
72 Augat machined 16-pin sockets
72 256Kx1 150nS DRAM chips (used both Hitachi HM50256P-15 and NEC D41256C-15
since I just happened to have a few tubes of each in my "standard stock.")
1 jumper wire, made by clipping a lead from a resistor.
My system(s) already have a resistor pack at RP4, so I didn't have to do
insert a new one.
A motherboard upgrade presents you with zero wait-state memory. Expansion RAM
cards have (apparently) 1 wait-state.
The choice of a motherboard swap, direct motherboard upgrade, or adding a RAM
expansion card will have to depend on your [de-]soldering skills and the costs
of the three choices; I cannot make that decision for you.
But I *CAN* say that a RAM upgrade is definitely worth every penny you put into
it in terms of improved system performance. I put 2 systems side by side, one
with 2MB motherboard and the other with 512K motherboard, and started the same
things on both (otherwise) identically-configured systems ... the 2MB system
wins every time, in many cases VERY noticeably. Personally I would recommend
(somehow) bringing your motherboard up to 2MB, then adding 1.5MB or 2MB RAM
expansion (depends whether you use the EIA/RAM combo card (1.5MB max) or just
a 2 MB RAM expansion card (which can be "made" by upgrading a 512K RAM card).
Thad Floryan [ thad at cup.portal.com (OR) ..!sun!portal!cup.portal.com!thad ]
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