All temperatures will be compared against the temperature of the original fans in their original locations. The goal is to incrementally upgrade the cooling fans and experiment with different intake/exhaust orientations all while monitoring the pertinent temperatures inside the case. I have gathered all of the hardware I need in order to move forward. The Apple Power Mac G4 device is built with a 64k level 1 cache and 1 MB backside (L2/L3) cache.VRAM: Video Card: CD Drive: L1 L2 Cache Other Power G3 PC100 ATI 1-99 to 6-99 Blue White M755640 Power Mac G5 Take Apart Front Inlet Fan(s) The front inlet.I am excited to report that I am ready to kick off the Power Mac G4 cooling project. The Apple Power Mac G4 has a Mac OS 8.6 pre-installed on it, a 400 MHz PowerPC 7400 (G4) processor, while its graphics are run by either a 2X AGP ATI Rage 128 or Rage 128 Pro graphics card with 16 MB of SDRAM.I imagine that cutting up Power Mac cases may not be for everyone.The Apple Power Mac G4 has a Mac OS 8.6 pre-installed on it, a 400 MHz PowerPC 7400 (G4) processor, while its graphics are run by an ATI Rage 128 graphics card with 16 MB of SDRAM. I want the project to be incremental so that it will benefit users of all comfort levels. The ultimate goal is still in the brainstorming stages, the project will build up to that point. Any case modification will have to absolutely look professional and clean. Ultimately the goal will be to add additional fans by changing the location of the hard drives and utilizing the liberated floor space of the case. Then I will move onto upgrading the existing fans while maintaining the same mounting locations.The Sentry 2 also offers fan control in addition to temperature monitoring. It monitors two more locations than the other product I was looking at. The Sentry 2 was a pleasant surprise. I will be using a NZXT Sentry 2 to monitor the temperatures of 5 locations in my Power Mac G4 Quicksilver. Its processes are backed by 64 MB of PC100 SDRAM.I have a hardware solution to monitor temperatures.
Ati Video Cards 1999 Power G4 With Fan Manual The AppleThis will be a fun project. Distribute This Page: Bookmark & Share Download: PDF Manual The Apple Power Macintosh G4/450 (AGP Graphics), based on the Sawtooth architecture, features a 450 MHz PowerPC 7400 (G4. Identifiers: Power Mac G4 - AGP - M7232LL/A - PowerMac3,1 - M5183 - 1810/1843 All Power Macintosh G4 Models All 1999 Models Dynamically Compare This Mac to Others. Apple Power Macintosh G4 450 (AGP) Specs. ATI Radeon X1900XT 512MB video card. I was also able to buy it locally so I did not have to pay shipping.Apple IIgs system (1999) 2.8MHz 65C816, ROM 3 mobo (1.125MB RAM on-board) in 'Limited Woz Edition' case. ![]() ![]() Delta, which most of this eras stock fans were, are the best at blowing lots of air, but also about the loudest. They are more in the middle in terms of db output. MDD stock PSU fans could get up around 38-40db, which for many types of audio work would make it unusable.I prefer Antec, but because of their robust longevity, not their quietness. They produce 26-30db, which is audible, but not MDD-like roaring. The 3-speed Antec's I use are always on top speed. I did both my former MDD with all SilenX. They are a bit more costly, but are very well engineered with quality parts.My main quiet fan experience though is with "SilenX" fans, which are also very high end and are also offered in oddball sizes and depths. Small fans (60mm and under) are always the loudest because they have to spin so fast to create enough CFM.The number one company for moving more air with less rpm is "Noctua", an Austrian company that puts steak knife type edges on their fans. I also have a lot more experience and faith in SilenX. SilenX are still at an inaudible db level and tend to blow more CFM.
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