• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

PowerMac 4400 with DOS card and display cable

quantumii

Well-known member
Hi,

Today I found a complete PowerMac 4400, and it has the DOS card inside as well. Along with it I picked up a printer (Canon printer with Apple branding), the keyboard and the mouse.

I also got the special split cable for the display for use between the mac and the PC card. The monitor was also there, but I think it is both too big and heavy for me, so I left it.

I figure I can use the machine just fine with a common apple-to-vga adapter which I already have.

I powered it on, and it chimes. The HDD is noisy. No further tests done yet. May have time for that after lunch today :)

It does not look similar to this one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Macintosh_4400

Mine has a plastic case, the Floppy is above the CDrom, and the HDD is next to the floppy. Weird..

 

quantumii

Well-known member
Why would someone do that? Maybe the true identity of the machine is hidden on the mainboard somewhere? The machine is located in my office, so I will not be able to check until Monday.

 

LCGuy

LC Doctor/Hot Rodder
That CPU card looks like a 604, so I'd say it'd most likely be a 7300 or 7600. Its definitely not a 4400 - this is a 4400:

800px-Power_Macintosh_7220.jpg.d806427509345de88aae9de33f37911d.jpg


(I know it says 7220 - the photo was taken by our very own Danamania, the 4400 was sold as the 7220 here)

Either way - its definitely no 4400 - the 4400 was based on a Tanzania board, which not only won't fit in an Outrigger case, but also has a soldered-on CPU. (G3 upgrades were available via the L2 cache slot)

 

tmtomh

Well-known member
Interesting mystery - but from the photos it seems pretty clear that the only thing from a 4400 on that machine is the name badge on the case. Inside and out it's definitely a 7300, 7500, or 7600.

 

quantumii

Well-known member
Yes. Probably the previous owner wanted to fool somebody with replacing the badge.

Still, a good find with the DOS card and all.

Also, I ditched the inkjet printer. It did only have a black ink cartrige, and it was probably dried out.

The battery kept the machine alive for about 5 minutes. Not very useful. :p

 

Bunsen

Admin-Witchfinder-General
Also, I ditched the inkjet printer. It did only have a black ink cartrige, and it was probably dried out.
Don't underestimate the utility of a printer that can be refilled with cheap ink without the manufacturer's guard dog chip telling you you can't.

 

quantumii

Well-known member
Hey, Do not make me go down to the recycling room to re-rescue it now. I have too much weird stuff already..

On second thought, maybe I will rescue it again. After all, it is a printer with a Mac printer port on it. It is a Stylewriter II if I remember correctly.

 

quantumii

Well-known member
Update:

Tested the machine with a monitor now. It boots into OS 9. A lot of personal data, so I guess a reinstall would be the right thing to do.

Does anybody know what software I need to install on it to make use of the PC card? It had a 1 GB disk image file on it, but I could not figure out how to boot it.

Also, mystery solved. It is a 7300/7500 series machine, according to System Profiler. No video input, so this must be a 7300 with the PC card.

 

quantumii

Well-known member
Thanks :) I will look into that when I have time. The mac is sitting in my storage room at work right now.

 
Top