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Mount cd image basilisk ii
Mount cd image basilisk ii





mount cd image basilisk ii
  1. #Mount cd image basilisk ii how to
  2. #Mount cd image basilisk ii upgrade
  3. #Mount cd image basilisk ii plus

#Mount cd image basilisk ii how to

Obviously, the next step will be to get a proper screwdriver to open this thing, figure out how to discharge the CRT so I don’t kill myself, and add some additional RAM. I booted off the diskette, and amazingly the floppy drive worked! And in about a minute I had booted up, and it saw the hard disk! I dragged the System folder over the hard disk, and rebooted, and yeah it booted right up! So I broke down and ordered a pre-installed diskette with MacOS 6.08. I’m not sure what the problem was, it’s possible it was the filesystem on the card, or some other issued with the Macintosh, I have no idea. I tried installing a MacOS 6.0.8 manually, but it crashed saying the system folder was corrupt, and then it just went empty disk mac on further boots. I first tried MacOS 7.0.1, but it would boot up greeting me with the error that needs more than 1Mb of ram. The real trick was installing the operating system.

mount cd image basilisk ii

To prepare the virtual hard disk, I used Cockatrice III, since the Macintosh Quadra 800 emulation includes SCSI, which let me create a raw disk image, partition it, and format it under MacOS 8.1. It’s what the Bluescsi want’s so don’t fight it! I named the file simply ‘HD10_512.hda’ which specifies it’s a hard disk, SCSI ID 1, target 0, 512 bytes/sector and it’s a ‘hda’ image. I’m a bit worried about opening up this thing as I’ms suspecting the plastics are a log weaker than they look, so I opted for just using a USB cable to power the device.Īnyways let me cut to the chase, I have an 8Gb Micro SD card that I formatted ExFAT (the documentation says Fat32 will work, but I found it might work once, but it’ll definitely never work after a reboot), with a single file emulating a 100Mb hard disk (Luxurious!).

#Mount cd image basilisk ii plus

Bluescsi module on the back of the Macintosh Plusĭocumentation on the bluescsi is scant, but it seems that a diode needs to be soldered onto the Macintosh Plus motherboard to enable bus power, so you don’t need an external USB power source.

mount cd image basilisk ii

I’ve heard of various SCSI emulators out there, and decided to go with a bluescsi v1 with a DB25 interface as they are generally cheaper, and the Macintosh Plus isn’t exactly all that fast so the effort of the v2 is mostly lost.

#Mount cd image basilisk ii upgrade

I’m more surprised that someone was using this in 1989 and didn’t take the plunge and upgrade the machine to the full 4Mb of ram.Īnyways I have this chunk of plastic and glass on a desk, but I can’t do a thing with it. And I can’t say that I’m all that surprised that a hard disk from 1989 is broken. And not like dead dead, but dead dead dead! After I freed the disk from the external enclosure, and tried to power it on, stand alone, the PSU refused to start as the disk has a hard short in the board somewhere. It included the larger keyboard, original mouse, and an external 20MB hard disk. This was rather unexpected, but this auction for a loaded Macintosh Plus had shown up, and it was shipping local, and very cheap for what it was.







Mount cd image basilisk ii