G4 Quicksilver - OS Reinstallation & Drive Capacity Answers Needed
My T-shirt says, "Kick me. I'm a PC." Please to bear with my ignorant questions.
(At least I was reared right -- on the Apple II and the 128 KB Mac.)
Situation: OS X Tiger on my Dad's G4 Quicksilver Tower of Power managed to corrupt itself, so that neither keyboard nor mouse worked. (It is, I am 100% certain, an OS problem and not a hardware problem, because I found that by bolting a secondary Ultra-ATA drive in and putting an OS install on it, the input devices work normally.) So the next step will be to pick up a copy of Leopard and "Archive and Install" the OS to get his G4 mojo back, such as it is. (Then begin using Leopard's Time Machine to prevent future OS corruption episodes.)
Couple of questions have come up around this repair.
1) My Dad really needs some extra backup space, and in the course of looking at options, I stumbled on this Support article, which says that the Quicksilver doesn't support partitions larger than 128GB, because the BootROM isn't built for it. He'd need to be an MDD model to have bigger partitions.
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2544
But he already has a 160GB drive installed, and nothing indicates the file system has capped the drive capacity. Is this article out of date?
2) If the Support article is out of date, will an EXTERNAL backup drive as new as a 2TB SATA drive in a USB 2.0 enclosure actually work on this machine, or will the G4 balk? (Perhaps the question is just whether the manufacturer has a driver that works for 10.5 Macs.)
3) As far as "Archive and Install" goes, once I refresh the OS installation, is the OS built so that I can free up space by deleting the entire "archived" OS directory?
Incidentally, Archive and Install is the coolest thing ever. As you all know, if my Dad were a PC, right now he'd be up a creek, having to wipe the entire partition just to reinstall the OS, whereby he would now be experiencing the tedium of backing his files up manually first and reinstalling all his apps. No such nonsense with OS X. Kudos, Apple!
Much obliged for your insights.
Cheers,
a k a
G4 Quicksilver Tower of Power, Mac OS X (10.5.8), Where's my coffee?