Thread
Daystar DiskRunner SCSI card
I have one of these cards, and popped it into a IIci last night. I fired it up with 4x4MB RAM, for a 16MB cache.
It seems to be working fine, though the IIci takes a little while longer to start up and I frankly don't see a lot of difference in performance. I also have a RasterOps 8/24Xli video card in the IIci, which is an interesting video card with another 4 RAM slots, able to give me a 5MB RAM disk and a 5MB GWorlds video RAM buffer. I want to try to do some benchmarking in the next couple of weeks. However....
What I am wondering about for now is the socketed 68000 processor on the Diskrunner card, which is meant to take the load off of the main CPU. Have a look at it on the attached photo: it looks very like the arrangement for a socketed 68882.
Now, the question of the moment is this: Do 68030 processors exist that could be popped into that socket (e.g., could I cut one off a dead board for this purpose?), and what would most likely happen if I were to replace the 68000 with such a 68030? Would anything fry or might it just work?

It seems to be working fine, though the IIci takes a little while longer to start up and I frankly don't see a lot of difference in performance. I also have a RasterOps 8/24Xli video card in the IIci, which is an interesting video card with another 4 RAM slots, able to give me a 5MB RAM disk and a 5MB GWorlds video RAM buffer. I want to try to do some benchmarking in the next couple of weeks. However....What I am wondering about for now is the socketed 68000 processor on the Diskrunner card, which is meant to take the load off of the main CPU. Have a look at it on the attached photo: it looks very like the arrangement for a socketed 68882.
Now, the question of the moment is this: Do 68030 processors exist that could be popped into that socket (e.g., could I cut one off a dead board for this purpose?), and what would most likely happen if I were to replace the 68000 with such a 68030? Would anything fry or might it just work?

68000 square is set up like an FPU (edge connections) the 68030 is a socket with pins. Two different animals. Would be a neat idea otherwise. I think the code is different also but not as sure about that. Physical diffrences are easier for my failing mind lol.
No.Do 68030 processors exist that could be popped into that socket
Yes.Would anything fry