After my trials and tribulations with my "old" SE/30 which refused to acknowledge any SCSI drives, I decided to keep it for spares, and get another one. Thanks everyone for helping me out, by the way.
I found someone selling an SE/30 20/40 (interesting RAM/HD ratio!) with a Colorboard 264 installed for the equivalent of 100$ in a local listing, and thought it was a decent deal.
So, I met with the owner (who used it for DTP in the early 90s), turned it on, and played around with it for 30 minutes before I made up my mind. The computer was a beauty; nary a scratch or a dent. It ran smoothly; even the original HD was virtually silent. Of course all was not as well as I was lead to believe. Like a horse (or, rather, zebra) given a shot of arsenic, it collapsed when I brought it home and turned it on. Simasimac. It works when I restart it, but I know it's a matter of hours/days/weeks before it will be as dead as, well, a dead zebra. I'll open it in a few days' time, and try to find someone willing to recap it for me. I so want this baby to work. By the way, is there a risk of rendering it "uncappable" (by compounding the damage) if I continue to use it?
But my main question is this: The Colorboard 264 is (according to LowEndMac) a fixed resolution card (24 bit VGA) intended, I guess, for the 13" Apple-Color High-Resolution Monitor. These are not easy to come by in Sweden. And even though I like original parts, they are simply too hefty. Would it be possible to use an LCD monitor (I have a VGA adapter), and if so, do I need to find one with a native resolution of 640x480@60Hz? Or would any unit supporting that resolution work? The 10" Denver LED-1030DVBT for example
Yes, I tried hooking it up to my 32" TV, but got an error message saying that the resolution was not supported. :
Cheers,
Blougram
I found someone selling an SE/30 20/40 (interesting RAM/HD ratio!) with a Colorboard 264 installed for the equivalent of 100$ in a local listing, and thought it was a decent deal.
So, I met with the owner (who used it for DTP in the early 90s), turned it on, and played around with it for 30 minutes before I made up my mind. The computer was a beauty; nary a scratch or a dent. It ran smoothly; even the original HD was virtually silent. Of course all was not as well as I was lead to believe. Like a horse (or, rather, zebra) given a shot of arsenic, it collapsed when I brought it home and turned it on. Simasimac. It works when I restart it, but I know it's a matter of hours/days/weeks before it will be as dead as, well, a dead zebra. I'll open it in a few days' time, and try to find someone willing to recap it for me. I so want this baby to work. By the way, is there a risk of rendering it "uncappable" (by compounding the damage) if I continue to use it?
But my main question is this: The Colorboard 264 is (according to LowEndMac) a fixed resolution card (24 bit VGA) intended, I guess, for the 13" Apple-Color High-Resolution Monitor. These are not easy to come by in Sweden. And even though I like original parts, they are simply too hefty. Would it be possible to use an LCD monitor (I have a VGA adapter), and if so, do I need to find one with a native resolution of 640x480@60Hz? Or would any unit supporting that resolution work? The 10" Denver LED-1030DVBT for example
Yes, I tried hooking it up to my 32" TV, but got an error message saying that the resolution was not supported. :
Cheers,
Blougram

