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OK, I'm considering building a 'Mac', and wanted to run some hardware by you guys to see what y'all thought.

 

Mobo: ASRock 775 915GL http://www.shopbot.com.au/p-15408-227065.html

I heard about this mobo from one of the first tutorials I saw about osx86. It has the same north and south bridge as the developer boxes, a nearly identical graphics chipset (onboard) and the onboard audio is just 1 version higher than the onboard audio on the developer boxes.

 

Processor: P4 3Ghz Prescott http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16819116014

Totally open to debate, but considering the cheap price, I figured I might as well go with a 3ghz P4. I might need someone to verify it's SSE support, as I'm not entirely sure about it.

 

Memory: 1gig gigaram 240-pin DDR2 400 PC3200 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16820221116

Not real concerned about the memory, there's a gig of DDR2 400, which apparently is what the board uses (was not entirely easy to find out..). I might grab two considering the price.

 

As for the rest, I'll prolly stick with my Sony DVD-RW/CD-RW drive and one of my Hard drives. I may get an IDE hard drive since both of mine are SATA as well.

 

Oh, and if anyone is curious, this is the case I was looking at. I've wanted to use this to do a microATX build for a long time, but never got a chance. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16811144109

 

 

All the items together are ~330 bucks, so there's definately room to expand. Just wanted to run these by you guys (mainly the mobo). Tell me what you think!

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Memory: 1gig gigaram 240-pin DDR2 400 PC3200 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16820221116

Not real concerned about the memory, there's a gig of DDR2 400, which apparently is what the board uses (was not entirely easy to find out..). I might grab two considering the price.

 

actually it was very easy to find out what kind of ram the board uses, it says right on the mobo page: Offer: Asrock 775 Dual 915GL Motherboard - Intel 915GL, 800MHz FSB, Dual 2xDDR400, ASRock A.G.I.8X, A.G.I. Ex, SATA, 10/100 LAN, USB2.0, 8Ch Audio, mATX

 

but other than that, good system :( although i would go for 2gb of ram, but maybe that's just me

double check the ram for that motherboard... does it take the 240-pin ram?

 

This is what I meant about not being sure what the mobo took, but after a small bit of research I figured it out.

 

Thanks guys, everything looks SUPER in the wiki compat list. Now to sell this oversize paperweight next to me (that I also built some time ago)

 

EDIT: Hey, does anyone know where I can get those apple logo stickers? I want to slap one on top of the box when I'm done :)

I built a 'Mac' 2 weeks ago when I moved into a friends flat and it's sitting in the living room running iTunes and casual Internet browsing, and it's been perfect in every department - Video, Sound, USB, SATA and DVD-RW. It's a conversation starter if you got any nerd friends round, the realisation that you can do this always gets priceless gawps!

 

Just for reference, this is what I used:

 

Gigabyte 8I865GME-775 Motherboard

Intel Celeron 2.8GHZ Socket 775 340+

1.5GB Kingston DDR400 Memory

LG GSA-H10A DVD-RW

80GB Seagate SATA Hard Drive.

ATI Radeon 9600SE (128MB)

 

Native install of Mac OSX 10.4.6 x86 DVD. (JaS)

 

If you need help with building or enquiries, I'll be happy to help.

here is the link to the homepage of the board:

 

http://www.asrock.com/product/775Dual-915GL.htm

 

Memory - Dual Channel DDR memory technology

- Supports DDR400/333

- DIMM slots: 2

- Max. capacity: 2GB

 

I hope this answer your question.

I'd recommend going for a 945 chipset board with onboard graphics if you can afford the minimal extra cost. The onboard GMA950 graphics is the same as the MacBooks and mini's and will therefore be officially supported for a few OS generations (Hoping that Leopard will be hacked in the future).

Plus it supports the faster DDR2 RAM.

 

I have the Intel 945GNTL (only has 10/100 LAN, the 945GNT has Gbit LAN and onboard Firewire I think)

 

Everything installed natively just as if I was on a real Mac, the 1 issue I have is my audio output is switched at the back (ie Mic is Line Out, and Line out is Mic). This is only annoying if you plan to Dual Boot and the solution is to use the Headphone out and Mic In from the front of the case as these are not switched.

I wrote an Installation guide detailing my experiences and posted it on these forums somewhere....

 

I run primarily in OS X.4.6, and occasionally boot back into XP using the Darwin Bootloader. My system is just as stable as my real (but aging) CRT iMac was with the advantage of being faster and capable of Dual Booting. Sleep is fully functional.

  • 4 weeks later...
I built a 'Mac' 2 weeks ago when I moved into a friends flat and it's sitting in the living room running iTunes and casual Internet browsing, and it's been perfect in every department - Video, Sound, USB, SATA and DVD-RW. It's a conversation starter if you got any nerd friends round, the realisation that you can do this always gets priceless gawps!

 

Just for reference, this is what I used:

 

Gigabyte 8I865GME-775 Motherboard

Intel Celeron 2.8GHZ Socket 775 340+

1.5GB Kingston DDR400 Memory

LG GSA-H10A DVD-RW

80GB Seagate SATA Hard Drive.

ATI Radeon 9600SE (128MB)

 

Native install of Mac OSX 10.4.6 x86 DVD. (JaS)

 

If you need help with building or enquiries, I'll be happy to help.

 

I just bought the same motherboard as you to install MacOS X (10.4.6 or 10.4.7).

I have Jas on a DVD.

Is that ok with all with this motherboard?

Are there some tricks I must know before.

I just have the integrated graphic card, is that ok? Is that ok with sound, network, video?

 

Thank you!

Processor: P4 3Ghz Prescott http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16819116014

Totally open to debate, but considering the cheap price, I figured I might as well go with a 3ghz P4. I might need someone to verify it's SSE support, as I'm not entirely sure about it.

 

If you are still wondering about the SSE support... It is a prescott... it would be the first CPU type to have sse3... so it is fully supported in that respect.

Oh, and if anyone is curious, this is the case I was looking at. I've wanted to use this to do a microATX build for a long time, but never got a chance. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16811144109

 

---

 

For some odd reason it won't let me quote that.

 

I have the Chenming version of that case, It's good, make sure you follow the instructions when installing... as once you put the HD's in, you can't put any more 5.25 bay components in...

 

It has excellent cooling (comes stock with a 120mm fan positioned right beside the CPU. go for round cables though.

 

I ended up having to change cases however because a PCI EXPRESS CARD WILL NOT FIT!

 

The case supports full size power supplys. (and Unlike the Chenming version... it looks like that one doesn't come with a POS PSU)

 

Best of luck.

-Flash

 

--System: Amelia--

A8N32-SLI Deluxe | A64X2 4400 @ 2.7 (Stock) | 4gb (single side) Crucial 400mhz (dual chan) | Lite-On 16x DVD RW (DL / 5xRAM / LS) | 2x WD Sata2 160gb | 2x Asus En7600gs Silent PciEX16 512mb (SLI 16/16) | Enermax Gold 550w SLI-Cert | Acrylic Clear Case (not branded) (XP Pro/Vista RC1)

 

--System: Amaya--

A8N-VM CSM (bios: 901) | AMD 3200+ @ 2.4 (Stock) | 1gb Crucial 400mhz (dual chan) | Lite-On 16x DVD RW (DL) | WD Sata 160gb | WD Sata2 160gb | Asus En7600gs Silent PciEX16 512mb | Kworld Pci Tuner. | VIO 450w | Cheap Black Case (not branded) | (XP Pro/Vista RC1/OSX.4.6)

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