Looks like it drove an Agfa image setter. Just casually googling around, seems like there might still be a (small) market for these.
You should a bit more research before you declare it worthless.
I ran your serial number over here and got this.
https://everymac.com/systems/apple/powermac_g4/specs/powermac_g4_1.25_mdd.html
Your system may have the same board but different firmware or the description of the system capabilities is incorrect from one of those sources.
Based on the serial number I believe this model will only run OS9 in the "classic" environment. i.e within OSX. (Tiger)
This is the "rereleased" G4 version that Apple sold for a while after people complained about dropping OS9 support.
Heh, that's funny. A couple of years ago I was going through a big stack of old floppies after I resurrected my Plus.
Disinfectant flagged one of them with MDEF. i though it was pretty funny, 30 year old virus still lurking.
Back in the day these things were pretty common around the office with...
I believe it came on the original Powerbook system install disks. (6.0.8-7.1 etc.)
It would certainly also be available on one of the Service Source CD's from the '90's, images/ISOs of which are available.
That is strange.
If it's an IDE drive you might try reformatting (low level) it in a PC if you have access to one.
After that, yeah, you might just let it go.
Techworks supplied Power Computing with caches and memory.
One of the "secrets" to Power Computing's faster Macs were bigger caches.
I have a Techworks 1MB cache I bought for my 8500. It made huge difference in performance over the stock 256K.
(I got a discount from Techworks stuff because I...
There's probably some damage to the directory or the desktop file or some bad blocks.
You can run the Apple Disk First Aid, it may fix it but Norton is a more comprehensive.
The zip drive issue may be the extension is damaged or missing.
Hmm, that's a shame, yeah fried components. No way to know why they fried or if replacing them would fix anything.
I only fire up my system a couple of times a year and I'm always surprised that it still works because I know one day it won't.
The HD is a serial drive, at the least the one in my system is.
Does the HD get power from the analog board? It may be that analog board needs to have the caps replaced.
If it has a separate PS for the board and drive check out this thread...
Nice score! The Pioneer is a neat clone! The keyboard is real bonus.
You might try removing the cards, it could be the power supply is getting weak.
No surprise the CD300 has trouble with CD-R's, they barely existed when that drive was made.
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