The 1.5 GB limit is in the process of being broken over at the MacOS9Lives forum, so it may very well happen one day that OS 9 can use the full 2 GB that an MDD (or, indeed, even a Sawtooth) can provide.
That being said, if you go with an MDD again, a single CPU will suffice (ideally, a 2003 re-release model, as those are slightly newer and may be slightly less prone to failure) as OS 9 can't natively use the second CPU outside of a few special applications (such as Photoshop). Unless you want to run Mac OS X at some point (in which case, a Dual 1.25 or 1.42 would be ideal).
Otherwise, I second the Quicksilver suggestion.
As Quicksilvers go, I suggest finding a 2002 model if you can, as they were available with slightly faster processors, and they can natively support drives larger than 128 GB on the internal IDE interfaces.
Sadly, based on my eBay search, everyone is overpricing both models substantially. Your best bet therefore would be to find someone semi-locally on either here or LEM Swap, or perhaps Craigslist.
To repair what you have now, are you sure it's the logic board? If so, it might be most cost effective to simply get a new one of those.
Whatever ends up, I wish you luck!
c
That being said, if you go with an MDD again, a single CPU will suffice (ideally, a 2003 re-release model, as those are slightly newer and may be slightly less prone to failure) as OS 9 can't natively use the second CPU outside of a few special applications (such as Photoshop). Unless you want to run Mac OS X at some point (in which case, a Dual 1.25 or 1.42 would be ideal).
Otherwise, I second the Quicksilver suggestion.
As Quicksilvers go, I suggest finding a 2002 model if you can, as they were available with slightly faster processors, and they can natively support drives larger than 128 GB on the internal IDE interfaces.
Sadly, based on my eBay search, everyone is overpricing both models substantially. Your best bet therefore would be to find someone semi-locally on either here or LEM Swap, or perhaps Craigslist.
To repair what you have now, are you sure it's the logic board? If so, it might be most cost effective to simply get a new one of those.
Whatever ends up, I wish you luck!
c




