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You made definitly the right steps when you planned and built the evaluation boards of the Pegasos 8641D and the Tetra Power.
But right now, and for the next several months, it seems that there will be no end user boards of that products.
Indeed but that's because we have other things to work on like the firmware and the next Efika revision. At the moment it's not economical to make an 8641D board for various reasons.
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I did not know that the 7447A is only available at up to 1.42 GHZ and that everything beyond is overclocked. Probably this is the reason why Apple only made G4 Macs up to 1.42 GHZ :-)
Actually they did have a 1.6GHz PowerBook. There are basically 4 variants of the 7447A and 7448; You can view the parametrics underneath the comparison block.
http://www.freescale.com/webapp/sps/sit ... de=MPC7448
* 'N' type which are incredibly low power and very expensive. For instance a 733/800MHz 7448 draws a few watts LESS power than a 600MHz 750CXe. Look at the parametrics for the MC7448VU1400ND. I think I worked out that a 1.1GHz chip would draw just slightly more. This would be a passively cooled G4 using the same heatsink as the G3, and faster than the original Pegasos G4 card. However they ARE *very* expensive!
* 'L' type which are the standard chip, at a reasonable price. This is probably what we would go for. Look at the parametrics for the MC7448VU1600LD.
* special bin sorts for 'PC style' overclocking - this is what is supplied to the Mac accelerator market, and this kind of chip is fuelled by the demand of the Mac accelerator market. They are somewhat cheaper than the standard versions but are basically 1.3GHz/1.42GHz chips overclocked and remarked.
- They run at higher voltages (which exponentially increases power consumption).
- They cut the operating temperature guidelines down from 105C to 65C.
- They cut the lifetime of the chip down from 10 years to 3 or 5.
They're essentially 'unreliable', but considering a Mac upgraded by that chip probably won't last as long (either in usefulness or as other components or component availability dies) as the CPU.. it hardly matters to the accelerator guys. Look at the parametrics for the MC7448VU1600PD.
* special bin sorts for overclocking for Apple (the so-called 'MPC7447C' you may have seen on PPCNUX :) - they were higher spec than the other overclocked chips, with a nicer operating temperature guideline (85C) and a little longer lifetime. Apple obviously want new machines to last for as long as new machines need to last. They sort of fit inbetween. They don't list these chips on the site but there are certifications for it hanging around.
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So, you say that a 1.42 GHZ cpu card for the existing Pegasos will cost about $450. Thats quite a lot of money for that...
Exactly.
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Did the price for 7447A cpus rise or fall since 08/2006? I do not know.
Not particularly.
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And I do not know if cpu cards have to be RoHS compliant or if it is difficult to make them compliant. But maybe it would be still possible to produce these cpu upgrades for EUR 200?
They would
cost 200 EUR to make which I figure today is about $300. The exchange rate has also changed! The US dollar is worthless :)
As Bill said, it would have been a taking care of the users gesture. As a retail card - or the basis of a new Pegasos revision - we need to add profit and cover our development costs, and allow resellers to make a profit too by setting a reasonable RRP!
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When bbrv made this offer I was expecing the Tetra Power to be released soon as it was announced to be shipped at Q3/2006, for $799 when one returns his Pegasos2.
Definitely not. We never had that plan.
The TetraPower was going to sell at $1500 perhaps for a complete system (like the ODW first was priced) and then drop strategically to $999 or $799 depending on demand and production economy. No trade-ins. We have no real use for Pegasos boards anymore; especially since, we cannot ship them anywhere since they contain lead components. All they would do is come back to bplan and go into the trash, which for a leaded board, is a lot of money. Recycling computer components responsibly costs more than making them.
Due to the complexity of the board and component supply, we are not going to just make 1000 boards and hope they sell, and give users a discount on sending boards to us for disposal.
That is the reality of RoHS.
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And what about making cpu card converters for Mac cpu upgrades? At least you would not have to buy the G4 cpus for complete, official Pegasos2 upgrade cards which should save you quite a lot of money.
Believe me, you are all free to go and find an electronics engineer willing to design such a card and bring it to market. We will even check your design and make sure it is up to standard.