[comp.sys.mac.hardware] Low Cost Mac+ Accelerator

hankin@sauron.osf.org (Scott Hankin) (02/27/91)

Someone asked is there was an option for lowly Mac+ users who wanted the
extra speed without spending an arm and a leg to get it.  I received the
following press release in the mail from Brainstorm:
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	   Brainstorm Introduces $249 Accelerator for Mac

San Francisco, Calif., January 10, 1991 - Today at MacWorld Exposition
Brainstorm Products demonstrated an innovative bus accelerator upgrade for
compact Macintoshes which delivers Mac-II performance for only 249.

Unlike existing accelerators for the Macintosh, the Brainstorm
Accelerator(TM) not only adds a specially designed high-speed 68000
processor clocked at 16MHz but also re-configures the Macintosh bus to run
at 16MHz, allowing memory and input/output chips on the Mac's motherboard to
run at the same speed as the 68000.  Existing accelerators do not increase
the operating speed of the bus beyond its original clock rate of 8MHz, and
are thus forced to slow down to accomodate the slower memory and
input/output chips on the motherboard.

The Brainstorm Accelerator triples the speed of graphics operations and
increases SCSI hard drive transfer rates by as much as a factor of five.
Computationally intensive processor tasks, such as re-calculating a
complicated spreadsheet, are accelerated by a minimum factor of 250%.

At the core of the bus accelerator's design is a proprietary high-density
Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), which takes control of key
timing signals on the Macintosh motherboard.  "The bus ASIC and a 68000 at
16MHz allows a Plus or SE to run 28% faster than a Mac II; it also reduces
our design to a two chip system, which is super-reliable and costs less than
a fourth of comparable 68020- or 68030-based systems," said David Zampino,
Brainstorm president.

The Brainstorm Accelerator for the Macintosh Plus is scheduled to ship in
mid-February, while a version for the SE is to be available in May.  A
version for the Macintosh Classic is also planned, although the company has
not set a precise release date.  Under development are options to add a
68882 math coprocessor and to upgrade to a 68030 CPU, both of which will be
simple plug-in upgrades.

Brainstorm Products has been developing hardware upgrades for the Macintosh
since 1985.  The company has been shipping its high-reliability Brainstorm
Memory and SCSI upgrades since 1987.

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I am not an employee of Brainstorm, nor even a satisfied customer.  I'm just
someone in the same boat as the original poster, passing on what might be a
solution. 

- Scott

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scott Hankin (hankin@osf.org) | Cole's Law:
Open Software Foundation      |	   Thinly sliced cabbage.

hankin@sauron.osf.org (Scott Hankin) (02/28/91)

    Since a couple of people asked, and I forgot to mention it:

	Brainstorm Products
	1145 Terra Bella Avenue
	Mountain View, CA 94043
	(415) 964-2131

    - Scott
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scott Hankin (hankin@osf.org) | Cole's Law:
Open Software Foundation      |	   Thinly sliced cabbage.

ingemar@isy.liu.se (Ingemar Ragnemalm) (03/02/91)

hankin@sauron.osf.org (Scott Hankin) writes:

>	   Brainstorm Introduces $249 Accelerator for Mac

This sounds like a better deal than upgrading my SE to a SE/30, as soon
as the SE version comes out. However...

...can the accelerator be disabled, so all the older programs that will only
work on Plus/SE and older Macs will work?

(With a 16MHz 68000, many of them might still work, but don't believe
that until I see it.)

--
Ingemar Ragnemalm
Dept. of Electrical Engineering	     ...!uunet!mcvax!enea!rainier!ingemar
                  ..
University of Linkoping, Sweden	     ingemar@isy.liu.se