Optical drive imac g3/233, what model?

Quel est le modèle de lecteur optique du iMac G3/233 révision A?

Voici une traduction de Google de ce lien vers le français. http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/imac/specs/imac_ab.html

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    When running diagnostics, iTunes doesn't detect an optical drive at all.  What do I do next?

    I think, no... I know you failed to provide complete details of everything that had been attempted.
    Then you responded with a smart donkey comment.
    Best of luck finding a resolution.

  • Best optical media (cd/dvd) for optical drive, iMac 21.5

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    Well, these iMac drives are finicky and, they are superslim laptop style drives installed vertically where any media could easily shift by 1/100th of an inch, so it's a gamble. I usually use my external burner - it is solid, works well, and can read anything. I've learned that the drive in my iMac likes Verbatim or Imation disks, so you might want to try one of those - they use different drives (change the mfr occasionally), so yours may be different.

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  • Optical Drive on the iSight G5 Model

    Please-does anyone know of any site(s) that show how to change the optical drive of the iSight Mac? I'm specifically interested in seeing a picture with connections to the drive. I'm putting together an iSight computer and there is a wire that I think may go to the optical drive which is labeled on the mother board as temp. 2. I want to find out whether this connector goes from the mother board to the optical drive and where else it may go. I'm hoping a site will show the optical drive and all of its connections as seen from the front. There is a French article that shows how to fix an iSight but I cannot find it. I know about Jim Warholic and Bad Caps and others that show how to change the HD and the Japanese sites that actually do not show the iSight version.

    tintinlad:
    In another post I had asked for this website: http://macboostfr.free.fr/?p=196 that you just posted.
    I read through it before and I thought I had saved it but no one knew about it or mentioned it until you just did. Of all of the publications dealing with the iSight, I think this is the best one. The photos are quite good and the limited amount of writing that I have interpreted is also quite good. If there ever were a reference article about the iSight, this is it. Thank you very much.
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  • I stuffed up, I bought a SATA optical drive instead of ATAPi, what now?

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    Thanks Dad, it's good advice, however the cost of the drive was only $22, and to spend $70 to fix my stuff-up seems like throwing good money after bad.
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    I'll wait until one of my friends goes stateside and I'll get the proper one from OWC.
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  • Daisy chain Voyager hard drives & iMac Intel Core2Duo (white model)

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    You can get them - "firewire to sata bridges" is the term.
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  • Replacing MacBook Pro's optical drive with SSD. What is the best way to migrate data?

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    What is the best way to make it?
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    Antonin

    OK, thanks a lot.
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  • I've lost my macbook pro mid 2010 optical drive ribbon cable. What do I do now?

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    The cables are not that expensive at an Apple store and it will be replaced for you as well.  Consider that option.
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  • What is the best product to clean the optical drive?

    My optical drive needs cleaning. What would be the best product to use on a mac?

    it's not or silver metal it is aluminum. Follow the guidelines by Apple in the MacBook Pro Users Guide.pdf
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  • External Optical Drive Not Recognized

    I've been using a Pioneer DVR111 external firewire drive for the last few months. Until tonight it's performed flawlessly.
    I ripped a couple of CDs into iTunes tonight, then when I tried to do another it wouldn't work. The CD wouldn't mount and the drive wasn't recognized by system profiler. I hear the drive spin up when the disc is inserted, but that's about it.
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    So I shut the computer down, unplugged everything and waited a few minutes. I think this is called resetting the PRAM or something like that.
    I rebooted from the install disc and rann hardware test. Passed without problem.
    I rebooted again and everything seemed fine. Both optical drives were recognized in Profiler.
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    Can you be more specific about "Arch Linux don't recognized it"?
    Post the output of lsusb and dmesg.
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  • Do I need a new optical drive?

    My CD/DVD drive stopped working a few weeks ago.  It is recognized by Windows but discs are not recognized.
    My system:
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    Looked for new drivers (don't see any)
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    I am no longer under warranty and if I need to buy a new drive what do I need to know to make sure it is compatible with my notebook?  I don't want the same model I have now since a lot of people seem to have had problems with it.
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    I added a screen shot of the price and of the part for your notebook and you can also check this link if it will work for you:
    http://h20141.www2.hp.com/Hpparts/Cart.aspx?mscssid=0E983EBD415E40E8A28EE9F13089C55B&setDest=Cart&Se...
    Although I am an HP employee, I am speaking for myself and not for HP.
    ...Click on Kudos if my reply was helpful and answered your question...
    Attachments:
    DVD drive.JPG ‏77 KB

  • Swapping out optical drive for SSD

    Early 2011, 15" Macbook Pro with Mavericks 9.1
    So basically, I want to replace my optical drive with an SSD. Seen a few discussions on it, know basically how it works, am aware of the warranty voiding issue, and also aware of how people at apple who made my computer are 12034725801x smarter than me and I shouldn't do it. I'm gonna do it anyway.
    What are the best brands for the superdrive slot to hold the second drive, and should I leave the HDD in the primary slot or move it to the secondary?
    The first one is the main question. I've read that only the primary can boot, and if that's true, then it would have to be the SSD for sure. Confirmation would be nice.

    Get the OWC DataDoubler bracket for your model. The SSD should replace the HDD. The HDD goes where the optical drive is located. What you need to do:
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    Step One: Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your OS X Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger, Leopard or Snow Leopard.) After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
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    Step Four: New Hard Drive Preparation
      1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
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          mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of
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          is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  Otherwise, click on the
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          (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to
          GUID  then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and
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      4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the
          drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main
          window.
      5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the
          Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to
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          hours depending upon the drive size.
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      1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
      2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
      3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
      4. Check the box labeled Erase destination.
      5. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the
          Destination entry field.
      6. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to the
          Source entry field.
      7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
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    Step Six: Open the Startup Disk preferences and select the new internal volume.  Click on the Restart button.  You should boot from the new drive.  Eject the external drive and disconnect it from the computer.
    If you wish to use your Home folder on the HDD instead of on the SSD:
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    If you are going to use an SSD as a boot drive together with your existing HDD as the "data" drive, here's what you can do.
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    Open Users & Groups preferences. Click on the lock icon and authenticate. CTRL- or RIGHT-click on your user account listing in the sidebar and select Advanced Options from the context menu.
    You will see a field labeled "Home dir:" At the right end you will see a Change button. Click on it. In the file dialog locate the Home folder now located on the HDD (HDD/Users/account_name/.) Select the folder, click on Open button. Restart the computer as directed.
    When the computer boots up it will now be using the Home folder located on the HDD.
    Another more technical method involving the Terminal and aliases is discussed in depth here: Using OS X with an SSD plus HDD setup - Matt Gemmell. This is my preferred approach because I can select which of the Home's folders I want on the HDD and which I don't want. For example, I like to keep the Documents and Library folders on the SSD because I access their content frequently.
    Be sure you retain the fully bootable system on your HDD in case you ever need it.

  • Mid-2010 Mac Mini, dead optical drive: Are any slim Firewire DVD burners compatible?

    The optical drive on my Mac Mini seems to have died prematurely, as the OEM drives are known to do. Estimated cost of replacing the internal component: $170. And it would be the exact same model Apple optical drive, not a more robust one.
    Now very reluctantly thinking of adding yet another peripheral. USB ports are pretty well filled but I don't use the Firewire port for anything.
    Trouble is, since Apple discontinued Firewire, the manufacturers of Mac-compatible optical drives aren't making Firewire models any more.
    There are a few recent Firewire DVD burners from PC peripheral manufacturers, such as Acer, Aopen, Dell, Pioneer, Sony (Amazon reviews say it's restricted to burning Sony media) in a small "slim" form factor.
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    There are some steps involved which may translate to tedium,
    as noted in the repair guide for the Mid 2010 Mini from iFixit.
    •Mac Mini - Mid 2010 Repair Guide - iFixit:
    https://www.ifixit.com/Device/Mac_Mini_Mid_2010
    At about Step 25, of an overall rated Difficult process, you can
    see the Optical Drive, and likely be at a point to install replace-
    ment, then reverse the process; paying heed to advice given.
    •Mac Mini - Model A1347 - Optical Drive Replacement - iFixit:
    https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Mac+mini+Model+A1347+Optical+Drive+Replacement/3167
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    in the process. Oh there also is a PRAM battery in this computer
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    If at one point, if several parts were to be replaced at one time, a
    visit to a service technician becomes very cost effective. Find one
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    you know someone at a college computer lab, they may be able
    to perform the swap, test their work, and be done, in short order.
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    It is a USB drive, can burn DVD/CD media, and is not costly.
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    with an SSD or second storage drive, may be a way to go; but
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    That would use the 'drive doubler' idea referred to at macsales.
    In the above main guide, is a primer on how to swap out the optical
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    Similar to what the OWC site says, but they have a good kit, too.
    Good luck & happy computing!

  • Putting a SSD in the optical drive bay of a late 2011 MacBook Pro.

    I want to put a large Solid State Drive in the optical drive bay of my late 2011 (Model ID 8,2, 2.4 GHZ quad i7, 8 Gigs RAM, SSD boot drive) using the carrier and drive from Other World Computing.  The "About This Mac" box shows that the optical drive is 6G so I'm thinking that it should be OK putting a 6G drive in that bay, but OWC says that MacBook Pros have only a 3G optical drive capability.  I know this was true on earlier models, but my bay says 6G.   The 6 G SSD's are faster and have a longer warranty.  I do pro audio work and want to record to the new drive with speed and reliability.  Is there any way to prove that my MBPro will handle 6G?  I was told by someone at OWC who looked up my my serial number that it would work, but another tech guy at OWC said they didn't recommend it.  I'm thinking that they just issue a blanket "no" answer to cover themselves against people ordering a 6G drive for a machine that wouldn't handle it.  Before I order a 6G drive is there a way I can know for sure if it will work?
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    If the computer is correctly identified as 15-inch Late 2011 MacBook Pro, and not an Early 2011 build series,
    according to MacTracker database (http://mactracker.ca download application) optical drive interface supports
    the same spec as the hard disk drive...
    Hard Drive Interface    6.0 Gbps Serial ATA (SATA)
    Optical Drive Interface    6.0 Gbps Serial ATA (SATA)
    So should there be an error in identification, that would make a difference. Some Early 2011 models may
    have the 3.0 Gbps or 6.0Gbps data rate in the optical drive. All Late 2011 models should be 6.0 Gbps.
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