Practically nothing is interchangeable between an early tray-loader and a 
slot-loader, except the hard drive. But you’ll find that out. :^)

Jim

> On Dec 24, 2015, at 8:03 PM, Thomas Fritsch <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Aaaactually. i Do. pulled a board from a bustedscreen G3-233, (blue first gen 
> slot loading) the one thatwe're discusing here is a "Snow White G3-600"
> 
> On Thu, Dec 24, 2015 at 10:32 PM, Google <[email protected]> wrote:
> So try installing OS X from a cold start with the ethernet cable 
> disconnected. If it loads without a problem, then you’ve got a bad ethernet 
> port or a crossed circuit or somesuch in your logic board.
> 
> If that were my iMac, I’d take it apart to see if there’s anything in there 
> that could be bridging a circuit. Metallic glitter can cause havoc, for 
> example. Or a staple or something. Don’t forget to use a new thermal pad or 
> thermal paste when you put the logic board back onto the divider board.
> 
> I’ve found all sorts of cruft, garbage and the like inside G3 iMacs that have 
> been exposed to elementary and middle school kids. eMacs too. All those 
> holes, slots and ports are an invitation to inquiring minds. The 
> convection-cooled design, with all those ventilation holes on the top case, 
> is worse than the early fan-cooled G3 iMacs. The perforated divider board, to 
> which the analog board and logic board are affixed, will let anything that 
> gets in make its way to the  backside of the logic board where it can’t be 
> seen without disassembly. A friend with a machine shop once lost his G3 iMac 
> when one metal shaving too many made it through the top. He said it was a 
> very brief but short fireworks show inside the case of his Snow model, which 
> became a Coal model.
> 
> If you had two G3 iMacs, of course, it would be a simple matter to swap out 
> parts to isolate the bad one(s) from the known-good one(s). But since you 
> don’t, you’ve probably found the culprit. Strange things can happen to 
> electronic devices that continue to be used for years and years past their 
> prime.
> 
> Jim Scott
> 
> 
> > On Dec 24, 2015, at 5:49 PM, Thomas Fritsch <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > oddly yea but i think i narrowed it to something i tried this morning to 
> > start it w/o the network cableleft idle for 2hrs came back.. no freeze, 
> > connect it , it locks up within seconds tried again 3 times start up w/o 
> > power wait a few connect to encounter freezing,
> >
> > On Thu, Dec 24, 2015 at 8:00 PM, Bruce Johnson 
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
> > If the RAM and HDD’s were bad, I doubt you would get as far as you get; 
> > after all, the Finder is running at that point if nothing else.
> >
> > Have you tried logging in as a different user? If the problem is something 
> > in your user profile, you can re-install OSX from now until the heat death 
> > of the universe and it won’t fix a thing.
> >
> > > On Dec 24, 2015, at 1:51 AM, Thomas Fritsch <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > i managed to find a spare hdd now unless i got THAT unlucky that its bad 
> > > too,  i'm right back at the orginal issue (apps bounce but no open/freeze 
> > > up) i tested the ram but im Still thinking thier faulty  and i dont have 
> > > any pcs to run a ramtest on.
> > >
> > > unless hdd + ram's bad i'm curious just how far i knackered my old iMac 
> > > ;-;
> >
> > --
> > Bruce Johnson
> > University of Arizona
> > College of Pharmacy
> > Information Technology Group
> >
> > Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs
> >
> > --
> 
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