Seems high to me. But then again, a quick scan of eBay confirms that astronomical prices for Apple II stuff seem to be the 'in' thing right now. I'd bet someone here would have one…
68kMLAPeripheralsby istar1018Fri, 21 Nov 2008 - 05:06
Take a look at this Apple II, especially the picture, and if anyone here has some estimates as to what it's worth, I would like to know:
Apple II Plus #034, one drive disk I…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Dog CowFri, 21 Nov 2008 - 00:56
It needs a SWIM chip too doesn't it? Maybe that chip is gone, but the power is still hooked up, so the floppy drive powers on and starts to read the disk but then nothing is there …
68kMLAPeripheralsby Mike RichardsonWed, 12 Nov 2008 - 07:09
I'm pretty sure that ROM support for those devices was removed after the Rev.A machines.
Luckily you can drop a 333MHz CPU module into a Rev.A : - and a bare Rev.A board should no…
68kMLAPeripheralsby BunsenWed, 12 Nov 2008 - 06:15
I am 99.99% certain these hacks will only work on a 233Mhz Rev A board.
Click to expand...
Make that 100% on the floppy drive. Maybe there are further hacks that can be done t…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Dennis NedryMon, 10 Nov 2008 - 16:20
Which reminds me..one of these days I've gotta find a Rev. A iMac somewhere...would be a neat machine to play around with, not to mention that if I keep it original and in good nic…
From what I gather, 8.6 is the minimum that will run on this iMac, and you say it would need less than 8.6. Does that mean there's no way to get this to work?
68kMLAPeripheralsby Dennis NedrySun, 9 Nov 2008 - 22:09
^^digging around it looks like the floppy port will only run on systems below 8.6, if the iMac has had the firmware update applied for OS X then that too could be a factor.
Yep, booted into OS 9 and the drive didn't do much except spin and then stop. I also tried inserting a disk before booting and nothing much happened. You would think it would spi…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Dennis NedrySun, 9 Nov 2008 - 17:00
After playing with the drive for a while, I was unable to get it to actually read a disk. It is getting power because it spins for a moment after a disk is inserted, but it seems …
68kMLAPeripheralsby Dennis NedrySun, 9 Nov 2008 - 07:34
J12: It was actually a common hack back in the day to mount a 20 pin boxed header here and connect a surplus Mac floppy drive to it - worked out cheaper than buying a USB FDD, if y…
I have noticed on an old 333 MHz iMac logic board that there are traces for what appear to be:
J12 = Mac floppy drive
J11 = CD analog audio
J4 = Serial port (Used for IrDA in or…
68kMLAPeripheralsby Dennis NedrySun, 9 Nov 2008 - 03:19
It has to do with a bad install disc. Thankfully I use only backups so I don't scratch my originals.
Click to expand...
Thats a very good idea, I have a 9.0 disc here that I go…
I've never seen it myself until now, but I've heard of it. The cursor turns into a little bomb icon. So weird.
http://img222.imageshack.us/my.php?image=img0324pe1.jpg
68kMLAPeripheralsby Mike RichardsonThu, 30 Oct 2008 - 20:51
Looks like you're right... after reading the manual I'm inclined to agree it's a retrofit, in which case there's probably little chance of the original circuitry being in the box.
68kMLAPeripheralsby ludditeSun, 5 Oct 2008 - 18:26
Doesn't look home-brew to me... my guess would be that they used the same back panel for both the SCSI version (as pictured) and the Smart Port version for the IIc. The IIc version…
Doesn't look home-brew to me... my guess would be that they used the same back panel for both the SCSI version (as pictured) and the Smart Port version for the IIc. The IIc version…
68kMLAPeripheralsby ludditeSat, 4 Oct 2008 - 22:09
This QC10 on ebay appears to be an upgraded, retorfit floppy disk model.
Anybody know if Quark sold them this way? with all the holes in the box it sure seems like a home-brew job…