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Help revive Macintosh Performa 6320CD, 1996 System Enabler 406

I've been working on this project for almost a year.

Essentially, I have lost the system disc which was in AC storage. I've gone through about 1/2 of the boxes and found a lot, but not the system disk.

I carefully followed manual instructions and opened the device. although the case outside is slightly yellowed, inside everything looked fine - no corrosion or battery leak. I compressed air cleaned everything and put it back together. The floppy and the CD player both work mechanically but I have no bootable CD. I have a floppy set of OS 7.5, but it is not recognized to boot from. I get four tone sounds and the floppy disk icon displays but with a question mark and I'm stuck there.


The answers I got originally were very helpful and informative, but the bottom line is I need to get the correct System Enabler version, which is 406, of OS 7.5.1, the original system software. I have no access to a pre 1998 Mac. One of the suggestions to creating a bootable floppy or CD included using system 8, but with only a partial solution.


Apple Support told me I'd have to search for a third party source like eBay, but none of the sellers even mention the System Enabler number in their offers. I tried MacintoshRepository but also had no success there.


I need to find an original system CD and maybe get some clarity on what the four sound tones mean.

Earlier Mac models

Posted on Dec 23, 2024 1:23 AM

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11 replies

Dec 23, 2024 3:45 PM in response to silvanet

silvanet wrote:
I need to get the correct System Enabler version, which is 406, of OS 7.5.1, the original system software.

A system enabler was used to adapt a system (7.5.1 in this case) to a later introduced Mac. Newer, supported operating system versions (for example, 7.5.3 or 7.6) did not need an enabler when used with an already existing Mac model.


In this case, if you know that the CD-ROM drive is OK, the easiest way would probably be to look for a retail version of Mac OS 7.6 on CD. If I recall correctly, the CD contained disk images as well, if one wanted to make floppies.


A full System 7.5.3 (a large self-mounting image consisting of many floppy-sized segments) was made available for download from Apple. System 7.5.3 should work with the Macintosh Performa 6320CD. However, you would then also have to find someone who could help you make a working startup floppy (such as the 8.1 Disk Tools PPC) and diskettes with some utilities.

OS 7 for PowerPC Performa 6320CD - best o… - Apple Community

Dec 23, 2024 7:38 AM in response to silvanet

Old PPC Macs seldom accepted an installer on a burned install disc. Even if they did, if the disc did not end up with the proper enablers, you were back at Square One.


The other issue are the enablers themselves. Some PPC Macs with the same model name had hardware “revisions” during their production life and sometimes a revision meant a new set of enablers. The Beige G3 series had three revisions; the optical disk from a Rev A would not work with a Rev B or C.


A full retail install disk would have enablers for all models capable of running that 0S version, but needs to be pressed, not burned.


The 62XX/63XX series were the most maligned Macs ever, ending up on top of Low End Macs list of “Road Apples.” They had a flawed logic board design before they ever reached the manufacturing floor. It’s very possible you could spend a lot of time and money fishing for the right disc and still not have a working computer.


If you simply need to recover data, then there is good news. That Mac series, one that ranked price point far over performance, used cheaper PATA interface drives instead of the pricier SCSI drive interfaces used in the “pro-series” Macs. Today that is a massive advantage. There are bare drive adapters and bare drive docks that accept ATA drives and let you mount them as an external drive on another computer with USB ports.


Not all accommodate the older PATA interface so be sure to look at the specs. Also, any 3.5-inch drive need to be powered. Because I own one, I know the adapter that OWC sells does both PATA and newer SATA drives and comes with the required power supply for 3.5-inch drives. Search their web site www.Macsales.com for “usb drive adapter” and I think it will pop right up.


Dec 23, 2024 9:19 AM in response to silvanet

—? There are no USB ports on that computer.


I know very well. I used to own one—and suffered through its poor design. The bare drive adapter attaches to a USB port on a ANOTHER computer so you can revover data AFTER physically removing the 6320s drive from the case.


—The internal HDD is a SATA.


No. The ATA/PATA interface in a 6320 is NOT the same as SATA. SATA was not even developed until AFTER your 6320 was discontinued Ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SATA


— I also have an external SCSI,


Not needed for recovering data. Too outdated, too hard to set up.


If you are not in the US or Canada, OWC has world-wide trade partners who can possibly get get the adapter for you:


https://www.owc.com/partners/where-to-buy


This is the bare drive adapter I use:


NewerTech Universal Drive Adapter for 2.5-inch, 3.5-inch, 5.25-inch, IDE, ATA, ATAPI, SATA Drives


I have no connection witih OWC other than as a customer.


Dec 23, 2024 6:42 AM in response to silvanet

The only startup sound that consists of exactly four distinct tones of increasing frequency is indicative of a hardware fault, but it is possible it can be software-related.


https://froods.ca/~dschaub/sound.html


Determine if one of those corresponds to what you're hearing. Scroll down to Crash Sounds.


I'd keep looking for what you need on eBay, or in the other half of your storage boxes. You could of course create a bootable CD-ROM or floppy but you would find an original one to create that copy anyway. They were not copy-protected.

Dec 23, 2024 8:49 AM in response to silvanet

He didn't say there were.


Is the reason for wanting to revive that Mac strictly related to retrieving its data? If so the solution will be much simpler.


Allan Jones also reminded me of how problematic that particular model was. Mine spent more time being repaired than it did in actual service. In my opinion it's simply not worth trying to fix. They barely worked to begin with.

Dec 23, 2024 4:35 PM in response to silvanet

A System Enabler 406 version 1.0 was mentioned for the Performa 6300 Series in an old article System Enablers: Current Versions & Change History (Feb 19, 2012). It also clearly says that No system enabler is required for this Macintosh under System 7.5.3 or later.


The enabler in question could earlier be found in the Older Software Downloads list

(download.info.apple.com/Apple_Support_Area/Apple_Software_Updates/English-North_American/Macintosh/System/Older_System/System_Enablers/System_Enabler_406_1.0.sea.bin).

Help revive Macintosh Performa 6320CD, 1996 System Enabler 406

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