IBook G4 internal Airport card faulty

I have had my iBook G4 since mid 2005 and up until recently it has been brilliant but sadly it has started crashing and the report indicates that the airport card is at fault. Having spoken with the local mac repairer they suggested that changing the card could solve the problem but equally, given the age of the laptop, it could ultimately be the logic board!! Rather than throw good money after bad their suggestion was to disconnect the airport card (which seems to be integrated rather than easily removable) and use a usb wifi connection. They suggest D-Link WUA-1340 but I cannot find this anywhere in the UK. Does anyone have a suggestion where I can buy this or an alternative that will work. Thank you.

this is what it looks like anyway: http://www.ifixit.com/iBook-Parts/iBook-G4-12-Inch-1-33-GHz-or-14-Inch-1-42-GHz- Airport-Bluetooth-Board/IF183-054
anymore, most adapters have a pretty good chance of working. Check around for which models are available where you live & then search for mac compatability on those.

Similar Messages

  • Internal Airport card

    I have read all kinds of posts on airport , but they do not answer a question or two that I have . My daughter bought an iPod in April of this year and we were able to use the airport card in the iMac to connect to the internet . Then when Snow Leopard came out I installed it on that day . Then the connection started to be on and off then I couldn't turn airport on unless I rebooted then it may or may not work . One apple support person said that I shouldn't even be able to share the internet that way . I got ahold of another person in support and she had me do some things to see if the hardware was the problem . It wasn't so she had me do a clean install of snow leopard and it has worked fine until three days ago . Now apple support says that what I am trying to do is not supported and I was more or less lucky to have had it work that way . So they say I need a router . Even my wife's net book has been doing what the ipod touch has been doing . Now my other question is even if I had a router to connect to the airport card it would have to receive and transmit , which support says it is not a transmitter . What the blank is the airport card suppose to do the , besides take up room Thank you for reading this far .

    Yes I am frustrated . But don't get me wrong my iMac is a thing beautiful . What I have is DSL comes into the house and into my DSL modem then into my iMac . And I was using the internal airport card to share internet with the iPod and a net book . Right now my air port is off and I cant turn it on unless I restart . There is only one support person that helped me and I am trying to get ahold of her. And yes it was working befor for internet shareing but not now . And I live at least 150 miles from an apple store . Oh blue me spare and agony on me .
    This is one response I have recieved
    .Ah… Mac OS X 10.6.x: and therein, lies the problem. Apple may have dropped explicit support for what is termed Internet Sharing with the release of Snow Leopard's first update, but it is not entirely clear if this is the case. Behind the scenes, there are mixed messages. Some AppleCare support and Apple Store employees have indicated that it is no longer explicitly supported, while others have insisted that it is. The question has been escalated to Engineering, but it may be weeks before there is an official answer or, if necessary, a fix. They've done things like this before—with Address Book interaction for dialing or SMS transmission with a mobile handset, for example, with the introduction of Mac OS X 10.5—and telephony features like that one I just described have never been reintroduced.
    I reiterate that as someone who deals extensively with network issues and has for more than 15 years, that using this capability is a VERY poor practice. I get that it's cheap and convenient, but it exacts a terrible cost on other users worldwide. The direct connection of any device to a 'data utility' provider is the reason that SO many machines, connected around the clock to broadband providers, have become network 'zombies' or 'botnets.' There are hundreds of thousands of them now, and these machines are almost exclusively the driver for DNS, distributed denial of service, data theft, and trojan software insertion. While it's true that such machines are typically limited to those running Windows XP or earlier, it really is a huge issue. Our electronic commerce site is routinely attacked literally hundreds of times a day.
    I suggest that to protect yourself—and, in particular, that Windows OS based netbook—as well as others, that you purchase a suitable hardware router and gateway with wireless capabilities, and that you enable WPA security at a minimum.
    Believe me, a single successful attack against an XP machine, even once detected, will cost you many times the dollar cost of a typical gateway, in just a single incident. Not to mention the ongoing cost of the loss of personal information, such as credit card data, bank account and other financial information, and loss due to your passwords being 'lifted' by a nefarious program inserted into your network.
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  • Can I use the internal airport card of my Mac as a BRIDGE?

    * My Mac is part of my home network.
    * My wired Router provides NAT addressing for all wired computers and printers.
    Question:
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    answered in another thread

  • How can I change my internal airport card from G to N ???

    I just want to know how can I change my internal airport card from G to N and how much that cost ?

    Robertito wrote:
    I just want to know how can I change my internal airport card from G to N and how much that cost ?
    The description of your machine (2 ghz MacBook) can describe maybe three different generations of the original polycarbonate MacBook.
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  • Configure internal airport card

    I've been using my powerbook with a Verizon Westell wireless network for a while now...and I was very pleased at how painless it was to set up
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  • WiFry + Macbook pro... circumventing the internal airport card?

    Hi,
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    Deepinside,
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  • IBook not recognizing AirPort Card

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  • Did all dual-USB iBooks have an airport card installed by default?

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    http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Apple/M7600LLE/
    http://www.synaptech.com/catalog/index.php?mainpage=index&cPath=4953
    http://www.teksale.com/laptops/laptopparts/listings/apple-airport-original.htm
    http://www.megamacs.com/v1/?action=view&pid=967052
    http://www.macrecycling.com/apple-airport-card-ibook-g3g4-powerbook-g4-p-100531. html
    http://memorysolutions.com/memorysolutions/orapaica1.html
    http://store.airportcardsdirect.com/
    http://www.powerbookguy.com/xcart/catalog/Airport-Cards-price0-p-1-c-507.html
    http://www.ifixit.com/cart/catalog/product98_AirportCard.html
    http://techrestore.com/xcart/product.php?productid=16174
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    I've purchased an internal Airport Extreme card for my Mac Pro (the tower). I thought I was getting a PCI card but it's just a tiny chip. It didn't come with any install instructions, just a note that it should be installed already and ready to go. There's no documentation on the support site here detailing how to do this. Does anyone know where to stick this thing? I'm getting extremely frustrated and I really don't want to have to cart my mac across town to the apple store.

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