Macintosh Quadra 630

Macintosh Quadra / LC / Performa 630
Release date July 15, 1994 (1994-07-15)
Introductory price US$1200 - US$2200
Discontinued October 5, 1995 (1995-10-05)
Operating system System 7.1.2P, System 7.5-Mac OS 8.1, or with PowerPC upgrade Mac OS 9.1
CPU Motorola 68040 or 68LC040 @ 33 MHz
Memory 4 MB, expandable to 68 MB (80 ns 72-pin SIMM)

The Macintosh Quadra 630 (Codenames: "Crusader", "Show Biz", "Show & Tell"; also sold with minor variations as the Macintosh LC 630 in the educational market and as the Macintosh Performa 630 in the consumer market) is a personal computer that is a part of Apple Computer's (now Apple Inc.) Quadra series of Macintosh computers. It was introduced in July 1994, as a replacement for the Quadra 610, and was discontinued in October 1995 with no direct replacement; however, the Power Macintosh 6200 and its Performa versions took a very similar position in Apple's product lineup later, and continued using the new case introduced with the 630. The case design made the system's motherboard accessible by opening a cover at the bottom rear of the case and sliding out a drawer that the motherboard was mounted on.

The 630 was the last Quadra Macintosh introduced, though the earlier 950 remained available longer. One of the big differences, when compared to some of the previous Macintosh models was the choice of the internal hard drive interface; conforming to the standards of the IBM PC compatible platform, cheaper, but slower IDE drives were used instead of SCSI for the first time. An external SCSI port was still available on the machines, and the CD-ROM used SCSI internally, but the 630 used an older controller that was much slower than the ones used in higher-end Macs of the time.[1]

Variants

The 630 was available in a confusing number of configurations, especially in the Performa variants (which had slightly different model numbers). The Quadra 630 featured an 68040 processor, 4 MB of RAM, a 250 MB hard disk and a CD-ROM drive; the LC 630 was essentially identical, but had the FPU-less 68LC040 processor. The LC 630 DOS compatible added an additional 486DX2 processor at 66 MHz and dedicated RAM on a Processor Direct Slot card to the LC 630. The Performa versions were:

References

  1. Davison, Remy. "The 10 Worst Macs Ever Built". Archived from the original on July 29, 2008. Retrieved 23 April 2006.
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