I sold it and bought a Rev B 20" iMac.madmaxmedia said:Thanks for the scoop! Did you OC yours yet?
I guess I'll still consider the switch, but not for performance. The 17" widescreen LCD sure looks nice... (plus the overall look...)
I sold it and bought a Rev B 20" iMac.madmaxmedia said:Thanks for the scoop! Did you OC yours yet?
I guess I'll still consider the switch, but not for performance. The 17" widescreen LCD sure looks nice... (plus the overall look...)
topgunn said:I sold it and bought a Rev B 20" iMac.
seb_carley said:Hi people
I've got a Zalman fanmate 2, and installed it (see pics)
problem is, I think I need to cut and rearrange the wires leading to and from the fanmate before it has any effect, currently the knob affects the fan speed not one bit... :confused
currently arranged like:
Mac
Red - Black - Yellow
plug
White - Red - black
fanmate
Yellow - Red - Black
plug
Red - Black - Yellow
Please could someone tell me how I should rearrange the 2nd and 3rd set of wires?
Cheers
madmaxmedia said:Now I'm wondering if my fan speed controller is working at all. From the original mod page there is a schematic of how it should be wired. The problem is that the wire colors in my eMac are not the same as in the schematic.
http://translate.google.com/transla...=UTF-8&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&prev=/language_tools
http://www.macbidouille.com/articles/regulateur-zalman/schema.jpg
Can anyone help with this?
lbodnar said:Jeff, (and others)
You still have to use eMac's power button to switch it on!
I had quite a few emails about that. The PC PSU provides the power all the time even when the eMac is off or asleep. This is how analog board on eMac works as well, it just drops voltages a little bit (20v->12v, etc)
lbodnar said:Yes, I did. I also thought that it might be easier on some PSUs so I tried and it works just as good as 12v. I can see no difference. The controller chip is specified for operation in 4.5...14v range.
Just pins 5 and 7 which are marked C12V should be switched over to +5V. Expect good amperage on this connection (5-10A?).JonnZ said:how do I have to solder the blindmate-connector to run the CPU at 5 v? Which pins have to be connected to 5 V instead of 12 v?
It would be very very helpful to have HDD that you can boot off and that will autostart VNC server which allows you to connect to it over the network and see the screen (I used PC as client.) Most probably you have the screen stuck in one of the low resolution modes which results in very high vertical refresh frequency like 100+Hz. It's OK for internal CRT as it was built around these but hardly many external screens can run that high. TFTs are definitely out of question.JonnZ said:When I now press the power-button, I can hear the start-up chime, all connections(fan, hd, od) have power, but i have no video! Neither on the external monitor out nor on the 18-pin video-connector.
Even the heat sinks get warm.![]()
Do you have any ideas?