Reply
   
 Quicksilver 733 - IDE replacement time i think... 
 
 
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 02:22 AM
Member

Join Date: May 2008
Group: Member
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 10


Quicksilver 733 - IDE replacement time i think...

Hey all - another newbie here, with what i suspect to be a sad boot disc.

My trusty, loyal and much loved eBay special 733 (DVR108, ATI Radeon 9800 Pro, Tiger for about $300 a year ago, starting many "why didnt i ditch Windoze years ago?" comments ) has 2 60gig Apple drives.

A week ago, it simply refused to boot, getting stuck at the grey screen stage. Finally found out that holdign the C key down will let me boot off the bootleg OSX discs i have and reinstalled the OS. I noted that it automatically sidestepped the Primary drive and installed itself on the Backup, which is now the Boot disc it seems..

All my data is intact (although i seem to have lost emails, but i am not sure thats not my poor setup in Mail...) and its all systems go again! A bit odd methinks...

Anyway, given the IDE has to be pushing its safe lifespan by now, I think its time to upgrade even if on the offchance its a dodge IDE that caused my minor meltdown.

So far I have learned that i wont get it to recognise anything bigger than 120gig, which is fine (i use a 250gig WD external for the big stuff and my music collection anyway) and that i need a PATA type drive (otherwise a PCI card to run SATA).

Not worth the money for the adaptor card (would rather spend the dosh an G5 if it needs a large outlay), so what spec should i be looking for exactly in a new 120-160gig IDE?

Cheers
Renoman is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
Huy
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 02:31 AM
Regular

Join Date: Jul 2005
Group: Regulars
Location: NSW
Posts: 4,127


Welcome to MTAU

That's weird.

I just picked up the same machine and it has a 160GB drive in it, which IS recognised.

I have owned the machine for a few days only so I don't know what is special about it etc... it is definitely more than 120GB.

I'm using both 40GB (IBM) and a 160GB (Seagate) in it. Actually it's just sitting there but it's still my machine.
Huy is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 06:43 AM
Regular

Join Date: Mar 2005
Group: Regulars
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 331


Quote:
Originally Posted by Huy View Post
Welcome to MTAU
That's weird.
I just picked up the same machine and it has a 160GB drive in it, which IS recognised.
I have owned the machine for a few days only so I don't know what is special about it etc... it is definitely more than 120GB.
MacTracker database (available as a free download from VersionTracker) says the first QuickSilver 733MHz machines July 2001-Jan 2002 don't have large drive support, models later than this do.
Check your machine serial number on the back of the case. first 2 characters designate the manufacture factory, the next is the year (0=2000, 1=2001 etc) and the next 2 are the week number in that year it was made. So a machine with a serial beginning SG135.... was made in Singapore in week 35 (late August) of 2001.
This will verify if your machine won't see more than 128G of drive space on each disk.

Get a 7200 RPM drive of your choice, 120G or larger if the above indicates large drive support.

Or, - You could try doing a reformat of the old disk.
If you have a utility programme like Techtool, run a surface scan for bad blocks first. If it finds some, then reformat the disk selecting the security option in Apple's disk utility app. to write zeros all over it. This takes a while, but if it finds any bad blocks it locks them out. Then run a new surface scan.
If you don't have Techtool, then just reformat it this way and it may behave happily again.

Good luck and welcome aboard MacTalk.
__________________
MB2.0-black, PBG4/15/1.5GHz, PMG4 MDD Dual 1GHz Server, PBG4/12/867MHz, iMacG3/333MHz-"Tangerine Queen"-decommissioning soon, Epson Stylus 1200, HP LJ2200dN, HP LJ5200N, HP DC7600 Ubuntu Server, Airport Extreme, Airport Express, Netgear 10/100 8 Port, Motorola Surfboard Cable modem. In the closet: PBG3/333 Bronze, PM6200, PB5300C, SE30, SE.
JimWOz is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 10:16 AM
Member

Join Date: May 2008
Group: Member
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 10


Cheers!

SG133... Guess that means I have an early one, and no big drive recognition.

So on that basis, what specs am i looking for in a new 120-160 IDE? Am a bit of luddite when it comes to telling them all apart

Any ideas on what happened to my original Tigel intall, and why it automatically reloaded the new install to the Backup?
Renoman is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 11:15 AM
Still stuck in 1984

Join Date: Mar 2005
Group: Regulars
Location: Inside your head
Posts: 2,435


MSY (and a lot of other PC-parts sellers) still sell IDE hard drives, although some may now call them "parallel ATA" or "PATA" to differentiate them from SATA drives (which are rapidly becoming the standard). Stick to Seagate or Western Digital brands.

As far as your "big drive issue", EveryMac doesn't say anything but LowEndMac says there are conflicting reports:

Quote:
There is conflicting information about "big drive" support. Apple doesn't list that as one of the Macs that supports large volumes (over 128 GB) on the internal hard drive bus, but several readers have reported successfully using 160 GB and larger hard drives on that bus. At this point, we believe that the 2001 Quicksilver is not afflicted with "big drive" issues." That said, Disk Utility may show "big drives" as having 128 GB capacity even though the Finder is aware of their true capacity.
Finding 120 GB drives is proving difficult these days, though. If you get a larger-than-120-GB drive and it doesn't get recognised properly, you can still create a partition (or partitions) that do not go over 128 GB, and use the drive happily.

Another option, if you think the expenditure is warranted, is to get a ProJovian SUA-100 card, which Try & Byte in Sydney sell for $104. This is a bootable PCI card that gives your Mac a single, master-and-slave UltraATA/133 bus (that can let you happily and reliably use really big PATA drives) and two SATA connectors, which will let you use the new ultra-high-capacity drives.
__________________
Tune into Psymbiensis, 24/7 chill music streaming straight to your desktop.
Cornell Univiersity says, "Watching TV shows makes you stupid." Break the addiction, visit White Dot today.
Wi-fi is a health risk, please use sparingly and with caution.
Brains is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 11:28 AM
Member

Join Date: May 2008
Group: Member
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 10


Cool thanks guys!

So - would this plug in ok?

http://www.scorptec.com.au/product/24492

Primary goal here is restore reliability at minimal cost - 2 of these is a 200 upgrade in capacity which should be ample until i upgrade to a G5!!
Renoman is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 11-05-2008, 11:55 PM
Hmm

Join Date: Feb 2004
Group: Regulars
Location: SA, 5174
Posts: 2,273


Quote:
Originally Posted by Renoman View Post
So - would this plug in ok?

http://www.scorptec.com.au/product/24492
Yes. That would be absolutely ideal. I feel it important to add (and Brains did address this) that even without large drive support that when you install it all you will need to do is just format the drive using disk utility (which will know what to do). Just select HFS+ (journaled) and without large drive support that 160GB drive will be 137GB. For the price you will pay for the drive it is a tiny loss of capacity.
__________________
"Forgive them for they know not what they do." JC. And that was on a bad day.
kim jong il is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008, 12:58 PM
Regular

Join Date: May 2008
Group: Regulars
Location: Melbourne
Posts: 146


I have an old 733 G4 lying around. Same issue, standard 128gb limit. Only way around it to my knowledge was a PCI card for either sata or a IDE card with large drive support. Problem with the cards from what ive read is that you cant install a fresh copy of OSX onto them and boot as the installer wont pick them up.
__________________
** G4 Dual 1.25ghz, 1gb RAM, 2 x 250gb HD, DVD-RW **
** P4 2.4ghz, 1gb RAM, 2 x 200gb HD, DVD-RW **
Dog Knight is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008, 01:29 PM
Hmm

Join Date: Feb 2004
Group: Regulars
Location: SA, 5174
Posts: 2,273


Quote:
Originally Posted by Dog Knight View Post
I have an old 733 G4 lying around. Same issue, standard 128gb limit. Only way around it to my knowledge was a PCI card for either sata or a IDE card with large drive support. Problem with the cards from what ive read is that you cant install a fresh copy of OSX onto them and boot as the installer wont pick them up.
Prepare to learn then. This thread here (specifically pages 2&3) has a discussion that you may find interesting. An important note if you use the firmware hack and use a large drive as the boot disk is that resetting your PRAM (NVRAM) will disable disk access until the hack is re-applied.
__________________
"Forgive them for they know not what they do." JC. And that was on a bad day.
kim jong il is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 12-05-2008, 02:13 PM
Still stuck in 1984

Join Date: Mar 2005
Group: Regulars
Location: Inside your head
Posts: 2,435


Quote:
Originally Posted by Dog Knight View Post
Problem with the cards from what ive read is that you cant install a fresh copy of OSX onto them and boot as the installer wont pick them up.
That depends on the cards, and the firmware that's on the.

The ProJovian card i recommended is recognised by all MacOS installers from MacOS 8.6 upwards. The PCI-based ATA and SATA cards from Sonnet and SiiG are recognised by MacOS 9.2.2 and all versions of OSX.
__________________
Tune into Psymbiensis, 24/7 chill music streaming straight to your desktop.
Cornell Univiersity says, "Watching TV shows makes you stupid." Break the addiction, visit White Dot today.
Wi-fi is a health risk, please use sparingly and with caution.
Brains is offline
Profile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.us Share on Facebook
Reply With Quote
 
Reply

Thread Tools

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
upgrading pm g4 733 mdd antechinus55 Desktop Computers 7 16-09-2006 07:38 PM
Mini 1.25 vs Powermac 733 g3monster Desktop Computers 6 05-03-2006 03:25 AM
Powermac G4 733 - 933 - 1gb Dimms? decryption Desktop Computers 2 31-08-2005 11:10 AM