Most likely it's a Saturn 128k card. You can check online to see if pictures of it match your card. The manual and software for the Saturn cards are available online
I got a little curious and got out my watt meter. With a 2009 Mac Mini and a 110 watt power supply I watched while the Mini booted. It was mostly a lot lower but there were some peaks at 40 watts. While running it varied from 14 to 30 watts depending on what I was doing.
I thought that maybe...
The conversion circuit board pictured is from a mouse with 1 screw holding it together. I poped open the half dozen I had handy and found 2 different circuit boards. Neither was the one pictured. Have more in storage but don't really have time to look for them ightnow
The Syquest drives probably worked with any computer that had SCSI so the disk could be in a number of formats. I used Syquest drives quite a bit with the Apple II so a lot of my disks are in ProDOS format.
I liked Syquest and collected quite a few. Never had a disk fail on me. Wish I could say...
It doesn't matter how well the room is insulated. If there are no windows or openings then all the light is absorbed by the walls so either way 100% of the wattage used by the bulb ends up ad heat.
There's probably lots of cards that work with your G5 but just have not been tested with one.
I don't have a PCIe G5 but I read once that a Sonnet Tempo SSD on a card would work with your machine. Maybe one of their eSATA cards will also work.
I have a number of PCIe cards. Wish I had a PCIe...
I have a PCIe expansion box that would hold up to 19 cards but it has very few installed. There’s some large noisy fans in it. I’m thinking that with only a few cards I don’t need anything like that amount of cooling. Unfortunately I can’t see any way to unplug one and if I clip the wire it’ll...
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