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PowerMac 7100 and 7200

Iamanamma

Well-known member
The APPLE specific video card should have the standard DA-15 "Macintosh" video connector on it, from what I've been able to see:
Yes, that's exactly what I pulled out of the 7100.  I misspoke when I said it was a VGA connector.  But, with an adapter (of which we have at least a dozen, not for sale) hooks right up to a VGA monitor.

 

paws

Well-known member
Yeah. "The worst one", I think. It came stock with a 601 as the only PPC machine, but can be upgraded as I remember.

 

register

Well-known member
It can be nicely upgraded with a Sonnet G3 card, a proper PCI graphics card and plenty of RAM :)

However, I would consider this option only with the ingredients available for free.

 

ArmorAlley

Well-known member
The PowerMac 7200 is a PCI machine, isn't it?
It is and makes an agreeable Bridge Mac, if you need to join much older 68K macs with much newer Macs.

It has PCI slots, so it can support SATA cards, U160 SCSI cards, Radeon graphic cards, 10/100 network cards.

It isn't especially fast but it would a reasonably good file./print-server if you have a little LAN at home.

 

Iamanamma

Well-known member
I did a better inventory last night.  I have 3 PM 7100, 1 PM 7200, and 1 PM 7500.  The 7200 and the 7500 both have 3 PCI expansion slots.  That makes them a little more useful.  I am going to put them both up on the trading post later, after I unwrap them and get some of the other specifics off of them.  Even though the area they've been stored in is really dusty, the machines are remarkably clean.  This is the video card I pulled out of the 7100 I opened up.  We've kept them wrapped up in bags, so they didn't get as dirty as they could have.

IMG-4430.JPG

 

Iamanamma

Well-known member
This is accurate, I'd be interested in any of the HPV or AV cards as upgrades/crossgrades for my 6100, and a 7200/120 if you've got one of those.
The 7200 is a 120.  There isn't anything very interesting inside it.  Nothing in the PCI slots.  It isn't even really discolored.

 

Franklinstein

Well-known member
The 7200 is kind of interesting especially if it's the 120MHz variety. They're becoming uncommon because nobody wants them so they may not be rare now but they will be at this rate, especially since they suffer from plastic-itis like most other Macs of the era. They were also sold in small numbers in Europe housed in a tower case and rebadged as the 8200. They do have an upgrade option, an uncommon Sonnet card (or maybe two? G3 and possibly a G4) complete with its own dedicated high-speed RAM slots that plugs into a PCI slot and basically hijacks the system. I tried to buy one once but someone REALLY wanted the ones I saw for sale, paying over $200 for one and $400 for the other. I would've kept bidding them up but I wasn't really willing to pay that much if I did successfully outbid them (they're just a curiosity and I don't think I'd actually use it except as a gee-whiz sort of display piece). If they had just let me have the one with the broken RAM slot for like $80 I would've not bid on the other and let them have it cheap (we were the only two bidders on those auctions) but no, they had to be greedy, so I made them pay. Hope they're enjoying them.

 

Iamanamma

Well-known member
They're becoming uncommon because nobody wants them so they may not be rare now but they will be at this rate, especially since they suffer from plastic-itis like most other Macs of the era.
I noticed there were only pieces and parts for sale on ebay.  And yes, the plastic-itis took out two G3 desktop units I had set aside as spares.  Every time I opened the cases something would break off.  I was amazed that this 7200 was not falling apart when I opened it to take a look inside.  I was even more amazed that it wasn't that nasty yellow color they tend to get.

 
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