Macintosh Color Classic II
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The Macintosh Color Classic (sold as the Macintosh Colour Classic in PAL regions) is a
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designed, manufactured and sold by
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from February 1993 to May 1995 (up to January 1998 in PAL markets). It has an
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design, with a small, integrated 10″
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Trinitron display at 512 × 384 pixel resolution. The display is capable of supporting up to thousands of colors with a video memory upgrade. The Color Classic is the final model of the original "compact" family of
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computers, and was replaced by the larger-display
Macintosh LC 500 series The Macintosh LC 500 series is a series of personal computers that were a part of Apple Computer's Macintosh LC family of Macintosh computers, designed as a successor to the compact Macintosh family of computers for the mid-1990s mainstream educa ...
and
Power Macintosh 5200 LC The Power Macintosh 5200 LC and Power Macintosh 5300 LC were a line of personal computers that are a part of Apple Computer's Power Macintosh, LC, and Performa families of Macintosh computers. When sold to the consumer market, the machines ...
.


Hardware

The Color Classic has a Motorola 68030 CPU running at 16 MHz and has a logic board similar to the
Macintosh LC II The Macintosh LC II is a personal computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer from March 1992 to March 1993. The LC II is an update to the original Macintosh LC, replacing its Motorola 68020 processor with a 68030 and increasin ...
. Like the
Macintosh SE The Macintosh SE is a personal computer designed, manufactured, and sold by Apple Computer, from March 1987 to October 1990. It marked a significant improvement on the Macintosh Plus design and was introduced by Apple at the same time as the Mac ...
and SE/30 before it, the Color Classic has a single expansion slot: an LC-type Processor Direct Slot (PDS), incompatible with the SE slots. This was primarily intended for the
Apple IIe Card The Apple IIe Card is a hardware emulation board, also referred to as compatibility card, which allows compatible Macintosh computers to run software designed for the Apple II series of computers (with the exception of the Apple IIGS, IIGS). ...
(the primary reason for the Color Classic's switchable 560 × 384 display, essentially quadruple the IIe's 280 × 192 High-Resolution graphics), which was offered with education models of the LCs. The card allowed the LCs to emulate an Apple IIe. The combination of the low-cost color Macintosh and Apple IIe compatibility was intended to encourage the education market's transition from Apple II models to Macintoshes. Other cards, such as CPU accelerators,
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and video cards were also made available for the Color Classic's Processor Direct Slot. The Color Classic shipped with the
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known as an Apple Keyboard II (M0487) which featured a soft power switch on the keyboard itself. The mouse supplied was the
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known as the Apple Desktop Bus Mouse II (M2706). A slightly updated model, the Color Classic II, featuring the
Macintosh LC 550 The Macintosh LC 500 series is a series of personal computers that were a part of Apple Computer's Macintosh LC family of Macintosh computers, designed as a successor to the compact Macintosh family of computers for the mid-1990s mainstream educat ...
logic board A motherboard (also called mainboard, main circuit board, mb, mboard, backplane board, base board, system board, logic board (only in Apple computers) or mobo) is the main printed circuit board (PCB) in general-purpose computers and other expan ...
with a 33 MHz processor, was released in Japan, Canada and some international markets in 1993, sometimes as the
Performa The Macintosh Performa is a family of personal computers designed, manufactured and sold by Apple Inc., Apple Computer, Inc. from 1992 to 1997. The Performa brand re-used models from Apple's Macintosh Quadra, Quadra, Macintosh Centris, Centri ...
275. Both versions of the Color Classic have 256 KB of onboard VRAM, expandable to 512 KB by plugging a 256 KB VRAM SIMM into the onboard 68-pin VRAM slot. The name "Color Classic" was not printed directly on the front panel, but on a separate plastic insert. This enabled the alternative spelling "Colour Classic" and "Colour Classic II" to be used in appropriate markets.


Upgrades

Powered by a Motorola 68030 processor, the Color Classic can only go up to Mac OS 7.6.1. However, some Color Classic users upgraded their machines with motherboards from Performa/LC 575 units ("Mystic" upgrade), while others have put entire Performa/LC/Quadra 630 or successor innards into them ("Takky" upgrade). Another common modification to this unit was to change the display to allow 640 × 480 resolution, which was a common requirement for many programs (especially
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s) to run. With the Mystic mod, the Color Classic uses the motherboard of the
Macintosh LC 575 The Macintosh LC 500 series is a series of personal computers that were a part of Apple Computer's Macintosh LC family of Macintosh computers, designed as a successor to the compact Macintosh family of computers for the mid-1990s mainstream educat ...
which has a Motorola 68LC040 CPU (at a speed of 33 MHz instead of 25 MHz) and is pin compatible with the Color Classic. A Color Classic with the Mystic upgrade can go up to Mac OS 8.1 (Mac OS 8.6 and newer require PowerPC processors). With the Takky mod, the case and connector need to be modded, but doing so will allow the use of a PowerPC 601, 603, or 604 equipped motherboard. A Color Classic with the Takky upgrade can go up to Mac OS 9.1 (Mac OS 9.2 and newer require a G3 processor). On Takky Color Classics, there is a way to upgrade the processor with a G3 CPU, but it will only go up to Mac OS 9.2.2 as Mac OS X isn't officially supported.


Models

Introduced February 1, 1993 (Japan only): Macintosh Performa 250 * Macintosh Performa 250 Introduced February 10, 1993 (Japan, Asia, Americas) / March 16, 1994 (PAL regions): Macintosh Color/Colour Classic * Macintosh Color Classic Introduced October 1, 1993 (South Korea) / September 9, 1994 (Japan): Macintosh Performa 275 * Macintosh Performa 275 Introduced October 21, 1993 (Japan, Asia, Canada) / December 3, 1994 (PAL regions): Macintosh Color/Colour Classic II * Macintosh Color Classic II


Timelines


References


External links


Colour Classic FAQ

powercc.org - Upgrading Tutorials for Mystic, Takky, 640x480
{{Apple hardware before 1998 Color Classic Color Classic Color Classic Computer-related introductions in 1993