Epson Lynx (Epson E01161NA, E01165EB) used in Epson Equity IIe line of PCs

Bought this motherboard by accident.
Once it arrived i didn't actually know what to do with it but since it was here decided to examine it.
Was not able to find anything online about it, including TheWayBackMachine.
By the look of it is obvious that the assembly was built for some specific purpose.
Was able to scrape some vague notes about office scanner or perhaps a printer.
That was incorrect presumption, it is just another proprietary contraption - the ones i try to keep away from.
The board came with 12MHz Intel processor, 2x1Mb 100ns memory modules, and a 48MHz crystal oscillator.
I expected the base frequency to be 12MHz (48/4), but the divisor is actually 6, so base frequency was mere 8MHz.
With de-turbo it drops further. At the same time the provided manual in the following post talks about 8/12MHz, so not sure what is going on.
Has 1 Mb on-board memory. Slow 100ns rated chips.
That first megabyte cannot be bypassed. No jumpers, etc.
Tried even removing the chips but then only 64Kb RAM get recognized, despite the SIMM slots being populated with 4x1Mb modules.
Maximum supported memory is 5Mb.
Instead of the standard AT DIN-5 keyboard connector there is a 5-pin header in the lower right corner.
Used that with some loose wires going to the keyboard DIN-5 pins.
No BIOS program.
During POST a message is displayed about using some SETUP diskette but that is nowhere to be found.
Because of that i was not able to configure HDD/CF geometry for IDE extension card. Had to work off Gotek floppy emulator.
The onboard FDD controller works fine. If IDE extension card is inserted its FDD controller is used instead of the onboard one.
The power connector had non-standard AT plastic pieces, but the pins are AT-standard.
Had to remove the plastic pieces to be able to insert the two common power plugs.
The most i was able to get out of the motherboard is 11.11MHz.
Didn't run most of the tests - the board is clearly not build for performance.
For reference - Superscape produces meager 5.4 fps which is only ~1 fps higher than the best 8086 score.
Yet, i am not complaining. The board is actually fun contraption to thinker with.
For completeness listed it in the combined benchmark results.