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G4 sawtooth

ken27238

6502
well today i got a new computer.....its a G4 "SawTooth"!!!!! here are the specs:

450mhz G4

768mb of ram

18gb hd

and it will soon be running 9.2.2 or mac os x server :beige:

 
hard drive: free, 256mb of memory: free, receiving a free computer for setting up a computer for some one: priceless

 
That Sawtooth is a good solid box. Most of them can be OC'd to 550MHz or more, and with a fast G4 upgrade and a video card upgrade, will do 720p HD video. Check to see which version of the Uni-North chip your motherboard has. The rev 3 won't allow dual CPUs, but if you have a rev 7 Uni-North, you can upgrade to a dual G4 and NVidia 6200 AGP (flashed PC) video card. Good score! :)

 
a fast G4 upgrade
Yeah, good luck with that. I've been trying to find a good price on one of these upgrades for months, with no luck at all. They regularly fetch $200-300 on eBay. Even higher for the "desirable" 1.8 GHz upgrade.

 
a fast G4 upgrade
Yeah, good luck with that. I've been trying to find a good price on one of these upgrades for months, with no luck at all. They regularly fetch $200-300 on eBay. Even higher for the "desirable" 1.8 GHz upgrade.
I applied at OWC, maybe I could get some upgrades cheaper? :D

 
Sawtooth's are great machines.

Mine is a 450MHz machine and it runs Tiger quite nicely. While I would like to upgrade it, I won't.

Why?

I mainly use it for OS 9. That OS just flies on this machine. For the retro gaming and distraction free word processing that I do, it's perfect.

 
That Sawtooth is a good solid box. Most of them can be OC'd to 550MHz or more, and with a fast G4 upgrade and a video card upgrade, will do 720p HD video. Check to see which version of the Uni-North chip your motherboard has. The rev 3 won't allow dual CPUs, but if you have a rev 7 Uni-North, you can upgrade to a dual G4 and NVidia 6200 AGP (flashed PC) video card. Good score! :)
720p.. barely. I had a Gigabit Ethernet G4 with a FastMac 1.5 ghz CPU upgrade, 1.25GB RAM, ATi 128MB Radeon 9800 Pro (which is core video supported) and it could not keep up with any 720p video. It would get about 18 fps.

 
That Sawtooth is a good solid box. Most of them can be OC'd to 550MHz or more, and with a fast G4 upgrade and a video card upgrade, will do 720p HD video. Check to see which version of the Uni-North chip your motherboard has. The rev 3 won't allow dual CPUs, but if you have a rev 7 Uni-North, you can upgrade to a dual G4 and NVidia 6200 AGP (flashed PC) video card. Good score! :)
720p.. barely. I had a Gigabit Ethernet G4 with a FastMac 1.5 ghz CPU upgrade, 1.25GB RAM, ATi 128MB Radeon 9800 Pro (which is core video supported) and it could not keep up with any 720p video. It would get about 18 fps.
The video card is not as important. OS X Macs did not use the video card to assist with decoding (except for one or two G3s that had DVD decoders) until Snow Leopard and then only when using the 9400M card.

You need at least Dual 1 GHz (or any single G5) to get good 720p video (VLC and QuickTime H.264 will use the dual processing). At least 133 MHz bus helps a lot too.

 
I have a dual 1ghz quick silver with 1.5gigs of ram and it can't do any 720p video i have tried I mainl tried 720p mkv files. It was close, but it skipped and if video doesn't play smooth it doesn't count for me.

 
I have a dual 1ghz quick silver with 1.5gigs of ram and it can't do any 720p video i have tried I mainl tried 720p mkv files. It was close, but it skipped and if video doesn't play smooth it doesn't count for me.
Try different players, etc. Go to QuickTime Trailers and download a 720p trailer and try that.

You have enough RAM, you have a 133 MHz bus. Maybe you need a 167 MHz bus though.

 
That Sawtooth is a good solid box. Most of them can be OC'd to 550MHz or more, and with a fast G4 upgrade and a video card upgrade, will do 720p HD video. Check to see which version of the Uni-North chip your motherboard has. The rev 3 won't allow dual CPUs, but if you have a rev 7 Uni-North, you can upgrade to a dual G4 and NVidia 6200 AGP (flashed PC) video card. Good score! :)
720p.. barely. I had a Gigabit Ethernet G4 with a FastMac 1.5 ghz CPU upgrade, 1.25GB RAM, ATi 128MB Radeon 9800 Pro (which is core video supported) and it could not keep up with any 720p video. It would get about 18 fps.
The video card is not as important. OS X Macs did not use the video card to assist with decoding (except for one or two G3s that had DVD decoders) until Snow Leopard and then only when using the 9400M card.

You need at least Dual 1 GHz (or any single G5) to get good 720p video (VLC and QuickTime H.264 will use the dual processing). At least 133 MHz bus helps a lot too.
I am aware, I am just saying those are the specs of the machine. I have a Dual 1ghz (167mhz bus) MDD, 1.75GB RAM, same video card as the other machine, and again, it DOES NOT play 720p at an acceptable framerate. I tried multiple sources, multiple players, included Quicktime trailers from Apple.com, and random videos in VLC.

 
That Sawtooth is a good solid box. Most of them can be OC'd to 550MHz or more, and with a fast G4 upgrade and a video card upgrade, will do 720p HD video. Check to see which version of the Uni-North chip your motherboard has. The rev 3 won't allow dual CPUs, but if you have a rev 7 Uni-North, you can upgrade to a dual G4 and NVidia 6200 AGP (flashed PC) video card. Good score! :)
720p.. barely. I had a Gigabit Ethernet G4 with a FastMac 1.5 ghz CPU upgrade, 1.25GB RAM, ATi 128MB Radeon 9800 Pro (which is core video supported) and it could not keep up with any 720p video. It would get about 18 fps.
The video card is not as important. OS X Macs did not use the video card to assist with decoding (except for one or two G3s that had DVD decoders) until Snow Leopard and then only when using the 9400M card.

You need at least Dual 1 GHz (or any single G5) to get good 720p video (VLC and QuickTime H.264 will use the dual processing). At least 133 MHz bus helps a lot too.
I am aware, I am just saying those are the specs of the machine. I have a Dual 1ghz (167mhz bus) MDD, 1.75GB RAM, same video card as the other machine, and again, it DOES NOT play 720p at an acceptable framerate. I tried multiple sources, multiple players, included Quicktime trailers from Apple.com, and random videos in VLC.
OK. Maybe a Dual 1.25 GHz G4 would provide enough, I guess.

 
That Sawtooth is a good solid box. Most of them can be OC'd to 550MHz or more, and with a fast G4 upgrade and a video card upgrade, will do 720p HD video. Check to see which version of the Uni-North chip your motherboard has. The rev 3 won't allow dual CPUs, but if you have a rev 7 Uni-North, you can upgrade to a dual G4 and NVidia 6200 AGP (flashed PC) video card. Good score! :)
720p.. barely. I had a Gigabit Ethernet G4 with a FastMac 1.5 ghz CPU upgrade, 1.25GB RAM, ATi 128MB Radeon 9800 Pro (which is core video supported) and it could not keep up with any 720p video. It would get about 18 fps.
The video card is not as important. OS X Macs did not use the video card to assist with decoding (except for one or two G3s that had DVD decoders) until Snow Leopard and then only when using the 9400M card.

You need at least Dual 1 GHz (or any single G5) to get good 720p video (VLC and QuickTime H.264 will use the dual processing). At least 133 MHz bus helps a lot too.
I am aware, I am just saying those are the specs of the machine. I have a Dual 1ghz (167mhz bus) MDD, 1.75GB RAM, same video card as the other machine, and again, it DOES NOT play 720p at an acceptable framerate. I tried multiple sources, multiple players, included Quicktime trailers from Apple.com, and random videos in VLC.
Not to get involved in a silly argument, but I have *the* very fastest G4 Powerbook at my disposal (One of the 1.67 DDR2 RAM models) and it faceplants pretty hard at anything involving H.264 at resolutions higher then 480P. (And it has to work pretty hard to manage that.) MPEG2 or even Xvid/Divx mpeg4 at higher-then SD resolutions should be doable on a G4 depending on the bitrate but I'd frankly be really surprised to see even a dual G4 play anything HD in H.264 without at least some frame drop.

(And of course nearly all legal downloadable HD content is in either H.264 or WMV, so it seems like sort of a theoretical question whether Divx or whatnot would work better.)

There are some alternative players out there that *might* eek it out. Googling turns up a commercial one called "CoreAVC/CorePlayer" that supposedly is fast enough to handle HD on a 1Ghz-ish G4. However apparently that one is missing enough features that it may be useless for real applications. (Might not be much fun to find you've paid $20 for an application that can play an H.264 video without frame drop but can't play the audio.)

Anyway. Just more whipping of a dead horse. In theory you might, just might, be able to play HD video on a G4 but evidence is in favor of it being more of a parlor trick then a practical application for those machines.

(Undoubtedly there are people out there who say that 1080P plays just fine on their 800Mhz iBook G4 with-no-special-fiddling-thank-you-very-much, but without someone peering over their shoulder to verify we don't know if what's really going on is the person in question just has very fond memories of the filmstrips they saw in elementary school. *beep*.)

 
I would bet that the Dual 1.42 GHz could play 720p smoothly, in either at least VLC or QuickTime.

Interestingly, VLC seems to be more optimized than QuickTime when it comes to a lot of formats.

 
I would bet that the Dual 1.42 GHz could play 720p smoothly, in either at least VLC or QuickTime.
Interestingly, VLC seems to be more optimized than QuickTime when it comes to a lot of formats.
You bet, but have you *seen* it? Questions about "why can't my super-fast G4 play HD" are a dime-a-dozen on Apple forums, so if "just worked" you'd think there would be fewer questions.

One thing people forget about comparing G4s (at least the ones Apple used) to just about any other CPU of similar vintage is it has a *much slower* CPU/Memory bus, and video playing is all about bandwidth. We're not talking a little slower, we're talking laughably slower. (The 2001 vintage Athlon Thunderbird motherboard I have stuck somewhere in my junk pile has a fatter CPU-Memory pipe then even the very fastest MDD Mac thanks to it actually supporting DDR rather then SDR transfers. DDR-memory G4 Macs are still throttled to SDR at the CPU socket.)

 
I would bet that the Dual 1.42 GHz could play 720p smoothly, in either at least VLC or QuickTime.
Interestingly, VLC seems to be more optimized than QuickTime when it comes to a lot of formats.
You bet, but have you *seen* it? Questions about "why can't my super-fast G4 play HD" are a dime-a-dozen on Apple forums, so if "just worked" you'd think there would be fewer questions.

One thing people forget about comparing G4s (at least the ones Apple used) to just about any other CPU of similar vintage is it has a *much slower* CPU/Memory bus, and video playing is all about bandwidth. We're not talking a little slower, we're talking laughably slower. (The 2001 vintage Athlon Thunderbird motherboard I have stuck somewhere in my junk pile has a fatter CPU-Memory pipe then even the very fastest MDD Mac thanks to it actually supporting DDR rather then SDR transfers. DDR-memory G4 Macs are still throttled to SDR at the CPU socket.)
I have a Dual 1.25 GHz I can test on. My Dual 1.42 GHz system is in parts though.

 
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