The Macintosh IIci was a faster version of the IIcx, which released a few months before the IIci did..
Spec | Details |
---|---|
Release Date | September 1989 |
Discontinuation Date | February 1993 |
Processor | Motorola 68030 @25MHz FPU: Yes Bus Speed: 25MHz |
RAM | 8x 30-pin SIMM Slots - 1 or 4MB Standard - 128MB Maximum |
Hard Disk | 3.5" SCSI - 40 or 80MB Standard |
Graphics | 64-320KB VRAM (shared with system RAM) |
Audio | Internal Speaker |
Internal Drives | 1x Auto-inject 3.5" 1.44MB Floppy Drive |
Expansion | 3x NuBus Slots, 1x Cache PDS Slot |
Networking | None |
Other I/O | - 2x ADB - 2x Serial - 1x DB25 SCSI - 1x DB19 External FDD Port - 1x DB15 Video Out - 1x Line Out |
PRAM Battery | 1/2AA Lithium 3.6V |
Original Mac OS | System 6.0.3 |
Maximum Mac OS | Mac OS 7.5.5 |
68040 CPU upgrade cards were available.
Check our page on SCSI SSD replacements for more info.
![]() Service Manual |
![]() Logic Board Schematic |
Capacitor Reference |
---|
The Macintosh IIci's Lithium PRAM battery is highly prone to leaking and should be removed.
The IIci motherboard uses many surface mount electrolytic capacitors, which always leak with age, causing corrosion to the motherboard. They must be replaced for reliable operation.
The power supplies in the Mac IIci sometimes need recapping and sometimes don't. It's up to you whether you want to recap a working unit.
Most original SCSI hard drives for these have gone bad, especially those made by Quantum, which suffer from sticky rubber bumpers in the head assembly.
The floppy drives in these often suffer from eject motor failures due to a gear that falls apart with age. This gear can be replaced without too much trouble.
The Mac IIcx's case yellows with age. A retrobrite process can be used to correct this, if it bothers you. The plastic is not nearly as brittle as Macs from the 90s though.
Home < Macintosh Portal < Mac II < Macintosh IIci