On Tue, 2011-04-26 at 16:01 -0700, Dan Ziegler wrote:
Ralph, this hard disk was pretty easy to get to: I just removed the
motherboard, and the disks were right there in a caddy. See xlr8 your
mac's page here:
http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/systems/iMac_g4/imacg4_takeapart.html
- it's helpful.
On Apr 30, 2011, at 4:07 AM, Ralph Green wrote:
I don't see how the bottom plate comes off.
I see in the pictures that they got it out.
But, what do you pull or pry on?
In the 2nd photo the plug that's causing you problems is shown taken
apart in about the 11 o'clock position and someone
On Sat, 2011-04-30 at 04:17 -0500, Kris Tilford wrote:
On Apr 30, 2011, at 4:07 AM, Ralph Green wrote:
I don't see how the bottom plate comes off.
I see in the pictures that they got it out.
But, what do you pull or pry on?
In the 2nd photo the plug that's causing you problems is shown
On Apr 26, 6:01 pm, Dan Ziegler d.ziegle...@gmail.com wrote:
Ralph, this hard disk was pretty easy to get to: I just removed the
motherboard, and the disks were right there in a caddy. See xlr8 your
mac's page
here:http://www.xlr8yourmac.com/systems/iMac_g4/imacg4_takeapart.html
- it's
On Apr 24, 6:14 pm, Dan Ziegler d.ziegle...@gmail.com wrote:
I have recently bought an iMac G4 (iLamp) off craigslist-it's the
original 17 model (800 MHz, SDRAM, 80 GB).
Just an aside, as your main questions have already been addressed by
others...
There were two extremely similar models of
On 2011/04/26 09:41, t...@io.com so eloquently wrote:
There were two extremely similar models of 800MHz G4, 17 iLamp.
The first one will boot into OS 9.2. The second one will not.It's
a bit like the difference between a regular MDD and a FW800 MDD,
except harder to tell apart.
Yours is
On Apr 26, 2011, at 10:58 AM, Tina K. wrote:
On 2011/04/26 09:41, t...@io.com so eloquently wrote:
There were two extremely similar models of 800MHz G4, 17 iLamp.
The first one will boot into OS 9.2. The second one will not.
It's
a bit like the difference between a regular MDD and a
On 2011/04/26 14:28, John Carmonne so eloquently wrote:
On Apr 26, 2011, at 10:58 AM, Tina K. wrote:
According to Mactracker both of the USB 1 17 iMacs use the GeForce4
MX but the earlier one came with 32 MB of VRAM whereas the second one
came with 64 MB VRAM.
Tina
IMO EveryMac.com gives
On Apr 26, 2011, at 1:43 PM, Tina K. wrote:
On 2011/04/26 14:28, John Carmonne so eloquently wrote:
On Apr 26, 2011, at 10:58 AM, Tina K. wrote:
According to Mactracker both of the USB 1 17 iMacs use the GeForce4
MX but the earlier one came with 32 MB of VRAM whereas the second
one
came
Thanks for all the insight... now I'll have to check and see what
GeForce it has!! ;-) This screen has plastic on the top as far as I
can tell, the shame is all the pixels are nice and bright, only the
top layer is scratched. Might just have to keep an eye out for dead
iMacs with good screens.
As
Hi there,
I have recently bought an iMac G4 (iLamp) off craigslist-it's the
original 17 model (800 MHz, SDRAM, 80 GB). When I bought it the girl
told me, I think it needs a Software Update. Well, turns out it
needed a lot more than that. I plugged it in, hooked up a Pro keyboard
and mouse, and
On Apr 24, 2011, at 4:14 PM, Dan Ziegler wrote:
But I was wondering why the old drive failed. It wouldn't even start
up off the OS X DVD to do a disk check! I took the original failed
hard drive and stuck it in my Linux box, and ran Disk Utility (the
Gnome app, it's similar to Apple's). Disk
Hi there,
I have recently bought an iMac G4 (iLamp) off craigslist-it's the
original 17 model (800 MHz, SDRAM, 80 GB). When I bought it the girl
told me, I think it needs a Software Update. Well, turns out it
needed a lot more than that. I plugged it in, hooked up a Pro keyboard
and mouse, and
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