Just starting a new hack, OS X on a compact mac

12 posts / 0 new
Last post
Offline
Last seen: 18 years 2 months ago
Joined: Jan 31 2006 - 08:23
Posts: 4
Just starting a new hack, OS X on a compact mac

Me and a friend of mine just started laying down some plans for a new custom desktop hack. The plan is to either use my friend's SE/30 or buy a 128k, 512k, or Classic and install a Mac Mini inside. We realized that if the original monitor were completely replaced with an LCD monitor we'd have loads of space inside for better ventilation and installing all sorts of extras in there Smile The only problem is I have been unable to find a 9-10 inch LCD monitor with a decent resolution, can somebody point me in the right direction? For those that have done similar mods, what sort of problems did you run into along the way and how did you resolve them?

moosemanmoo's picture
Offline
Last seen: 9 years 12 months ago
Joined: Aug 17 2004 - 15:24
Posts: 686
The other mods like this have

The other mods like this have used LCDs designed for car computers. I think they were very straightforward.

Offline
Last seen: 18 years 2 months ago
Joined: Jan 31 2006 - 08:23
Posts: 4
Yes, I have seen those

Unfortunately, all of the car monitors I found on Google were 5-8 inches, I'm looking for 9-10, and I also would prefer something slightly higher rez, any links to real good ones for this purpose?

Offline
Last seen: 2 months 1 week ago
Joined: Dec 19 2003 - 17:40
Posts: 566
Colour Classic...

Take a look in the Colour Classic forum down near the bottom of the forum listing. They do similar things to CCs down there...

TOM

Offline
Last seen: 11 months 2 weeks ago
Joined: Dec 20 2003 - 10:38
Posts: 7
10 inch LCD available

http://www.thecoconet.com/

The shop in Tokyo and the web shows only in Japanese. I experienced to use old Laptop LCDs to convert to Apple II monitors and Mac monitors so far successfully. They sell a LCD or aLCD plus a Video circit Kit.

Offline
Last seen: 18 years 2 months ago
Joined: Jan 31 2006 - 08:23
Posts: 4
Thanks for the help!

By using the manufacturer's product number I was able to find thet product on an english website. This lead me to discover that Toshiba also makes a similar product, the same size but with a higher resolution, unfortunately I have no been able to find anyone that sells the product, it is the Toshiba 10C313

catmistake's picture
Offline
Last seen: 3 years 2 weeks ago
Joined: Dec 20 2003 - 10:38
Posts: 1100
might be useful

http://www.applefritter.com/node/9437#comment-28650

I believe DrBunsen has link to a nice LCD...

The sweetness of this hack is that you don't need to destroy the Mac Mini for this to work... just something to keep in mind...

Offline
Last seen: 9 years 3 months ago
Joined: Dec 20 2003 - 10:38
Posts: 354
Are you sure you want 10 inch

Are you sure you want 10 inches? At least on a Color Classic, I seem to recall that the opening for the monitor is perfect for an 8.4 inch diagonal. Any more than that is simply wasted space behind the plastics. I think the other compact macs had very slightly smaller monitors.

As for resolution, there are only so many pixels you can cram into a compact mac's space before it gets a little unuseable. VGA is great, SVGA works but is pushing it.

Barry's picture
Offline
Last seen: 15 years 11 months ago
Joined: Dec 20 2003 - 10:38
Posts: 177
Re: Are you sure you want 10 inch

Are you sure you want 10 inches?

Must, resist, urge... Smile

You also have to remember, that small of a screen with that high of a resolution is really hard to read for long periods of time.

Offline
Last seen: 18 years 2 months ago
Joined: Jan 31 2006 - 08:23
Posts: 4
Resolution Independence

Well, I'm hoping the next major iteration of OS X will have resolution independence working flawlessly so the extra pixels would be important.

DrBunsen's picture
Offline
Last seen: 10 years 4 months ago
Joined: Dec 20 2003 - 10:38
Posts: 946
8 inches baby

that auction link is over now of course, but the "seller's other items" link should take you through to some useful 8" to 9" ones. as noted, they're standard format not widescreen.

Offline
Last seen: 17 years 2 months ago
Joined: Jan 10 2006 - 01:16
Posts: 22
Please please please do not hack an SE/30

In this day and age, an SE/30 with its full 32-bit bus, maximum RAM of 128MB and 2TB data storage (with System 7.5.5) is still a useful machine. I have several with Ethernet Cards that I use for quick and dirty plug and play backup DNS, Web, File, mail servers for both Mac and PC networks.

If you're going to hack a machine, try using a Mac Classic. Their boards are dog slow, barely upgradeable and the case actually looks much better than an SE/30

Log in or register to post comments