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- From: mckeeveb@monashee.sfu.ca (Gumby - The unknown user)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems
- Subject: Re: Upgrading a ZyXEL 1496E to an E+
- Message-ID: <mckeeveb.726656955@sfu.ca>
- Date: 10 Jan 93 09:09:15 GMT
- References: <020954f9@p101.f701.n202.z1.fidonet.org> <93Jan08.021101.27410@acs.ucalgary.ca> <1inih0INNqsh@mudos.ann-arbor.mi.us>
- Sender: news@sfu.ca
- Organization: Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., Canada
- Lines: 63
-
- mju@mudos.ann-arbor.mi.us (Marc Unangst) writes:
-
- >The question isn't whether it's possible or impossible. The question
- >really is whether it's PRACTICAL. Just as it isn't practical to
- >upgrade your 286 to a 486 without getting a new motherboard, my
- >feeling is that it isn't practical to upgrade your E to an E+. Sure,
- >you could pull out your 'scope and your soldering iron and, with
- >several hours' work, replace the appropriate parts in an E to turn it
- >into an E+. But most of us consider our time somewhat valuable. In
- >the time it would take you to make the modification, you could
- >probably go out and earn the difference between the cost of a DIY
- >upgrade and the cost of a new E+. Assuming, of course, you are the
- >sort of person with the requisite skills to actually perform the DIY
- >upgrade.
-
- Um, hate to interrupt.. but the innards of the new E's and E+'s are identical.
- Some of the older ones may actually have slower processors, but the only other
- separating factor we can find is that E+'s always have the 1992 DSP RAM board
- where E's *MAY* have the older/smaller 1990 model.
-
- >What's more, if you buy an E+, you can then sell your E to someone
- >else and recover part of the cost of the upgrade. And you end up with
- >a new modem that still has the 5-year warranty. If you perform the
- >DIY upgrade, you will definitely void your warranty.
-
- Then again, you'd expect that people who are willing to preform such an
- upgrade to either to the maintenace themselves, or revert the modem and send
- it back in it's original condition.
-
- >This is pretty much the same reason that ZyXEL/Zero One doesn't offer
- >an upgrade. The "upgrade" would probably consist of taking out your E
- >board and putting in an E+ board. If you're going to replace the
- >whole innards of the modem, you might as well replace the shell and
- >the power supply and end up with an entire new modem, instead of
- >something as useless as a bare E board.
-
- The main reason is marketing.
-
- If you don't believe me, look at the auto market. They sell new cars with
- a CellPhone transciever unit already installed and leave the handset as an
- $800 option for those people "who are willing to pay more". All it is is
- selling the same product with reduced features at a lower price "because
- someone will want to pay less to get less" or vice versa.
-
- >>(you could sell the developer's kit with an upgraded DSP memory
- >>piggyback board, and then once someone has written code for whatever
- >>feature, you could package EPROMS with DSP boards and sell those as
- >>upgrades... possibilities are endless..)
-
- >Except from what Tyrone and others have said, the differences aren't
- >confined to just the piggyback DSP memory card. A faster 68000 is
- >used (although I'm not too pleased with the fact that they're running
- >a 16MHz 68000 at 20MHz...), as well as a faster DSP. This is *not* a
- >trivial, swap-a-few-socketed-chips upgrade, kids.
-
- On all the units made after the E+ was released, there is a jumper on the
- main board to select processor speed. There really is no difference.
-
- --
- Rob McKeever VE7ICJ rmckeeve@sfu.ca mckeeveb@sfu.ca 604-291-0457
- "Do you know what standards are? They're career paths for people who don't
- want to work!" - John Parkinson, Ernst & Young at the BCDMA Conference '92
- -*- Standard Disclaimers should be adequate -*-
-