Recommendations? USB 2.0 & Firewire PCI card for MDD Dual Boot G4 (1.25 Ghz

Can anyone recommend a good USB 2.0 and Firewire combo PCI card? (at least 3 USB 2.0 ports and 2 FW) for my G4 MDD Dual Boot- 1.25 Ghz)?
I have an Orangelink+ Micro USB 2.0/FW PCI card from the days of OS 9- that's supposed to be USB 2.0 under OS X, but isn't (it shows up as max 12/mbps in System Profiler). I'd like to get an external Hard Drive and most of them are USB 2.0 now.

Another question:
Under system profiler, it shows that I have one USB 2.0 port. I'm assuming it's an internal port, because all of the external ports show transfer rates of 12mbps. Is this a correct assumption?
Thanks in advance for any help!




*Sorry moderator(s). Initially posted in wrong section. My apologies*

G4 Dual Boot, MDD, Dual 1.25, Mac OS X (10.3.9)

Posted on Dec 26, 2005 9:06 PM

Reply
8 replies

Dec 27, 2005 10:06 AM in response to RAfBOy

Can anyone recommend a good USB 2.0 and Firewire
combo PCI card? (at least 3 USB 2.0 ports and 2 FW)
for my G4 MDD Dual Boot- 1.25 Ghz)?
I have an Orangelink+ Micro USB 2.0/FW PCI card from
the days of OS 9- that's supposed to be USB 2.0 under
OS X, but isn't (it shows up as max 12/mbps in System
Profiler). I'd like to get an external Hard Drive and
most of them are USB 2.0 now.

Another question:
Under system profiler, it shows that I have one USB
2.0 port. I'm assuming it's an internal port, because
all of the external ports show transfer rates of
12mbps. Is this a correct assumption?
Thanks in advance for any help!


I have the same Mac. The built-in USB ports are USB 1.1, and limited to low speed.

I used to have a Orange Micro OrangeUSB USB 2.0 PCI Card in it with four external USB 2.0 ports and one internal, and high-speed USB worked in OS 9 with their special drivers. When USB 2.0 support was added to OS X, it also worked with that.

I swapped it for a SIIG FireWire 800+Hi-Speed USB Combo a while back, it has two external USB 2.0 ports, one external FireWire 800 port, one external FireWire 400 port, three internal USB 2.0 ports, and one internal FireWire 800 port. All the ports work fine in OS X, I never tried it in OS 9 but I imagine in OS 9 the USB ports will be treated as low-speed.

The only hassle with this card comes from having so many ports. Two of the internal USB ports are on a pin-out rather than a USB connector. I used a USB PCI bracket on an empty PCI slot to expose those ports externally.

I ended up getting an external FireWire 800 drive that also supports USB 2.0 so I can move it to my PC laptop. Hooking it up via FireWire 800 is not only faster than USB 2.0, but it also supplies power to the drive so I don't need the AC adapter when hooked up to the Mac.

PowerMac G4 MDD Dual 1.25GHz Mac OS X (10.4.3)

Dec 27, 2005 10:39 AM in response to Darius Vaskelis

I used to have a Orange Micro OrangeUSB USB 2.0 PCI
Card in it with four external USB 2.0 ports and one
internal, and high-speed USB worked in OS 9 with
their special drivers. When USB 2.0 support was
added to OS X, it also worked with that.


It sounds like you had the same PCI card as I do. How did you get the USB 2.0 speeds in OS X? The ports on my card only register as USB 1.1 (12 mbps) in OS 10.3.9. When I first installed the card and went to install the drivers in OS X, it stated that no drivers were needed. Unfortunately Orange Micro's out of business now and no drivers are available/supported.

I swapped it for a SIIG FireWire 800+Hi-Speed USB
Combo a while back, it has two external USB 2.0
ports, one external FireWire 800 port, one external
FireWire 400 port, three internal USB 2.0 ports, and
one internal FireWire 800 port. All the ports work
fine in OS X, I never tried it in OS 9 but I imagine
in OS 9 the USB ports will be treated as low-speed.
The only hassle with this card comes from having so many ports. Two of the >internal USB ports are on a pin-out rather than a USB connector. I used a >USB PCI bracket on an empty PCI slot to expose those ports externally.


I rarely use OS 9 anymore, so that's no longer an issue. The problem is that my PCI slots are packed so I'm not sure if I can break out the USB port due to the lack of space.

Dec 27, 2005 11:01 AM in response to RAfBOy

It sounds like you had the same PCI card as I do. How
did you get the USB 2.0 speeds in OS X? The ports on
my card only register as USB 1.1 (12 mbps) in OS
10.3.9. When I first installed the card and went to
install the drivers in OS X, it stated that no
drivers were needed. Unfortunately Orange Micro's out
of business now and no drivers are
available/supported.


I didn't do anything special, they just worked once whatever release came out of OS X that added USB 2.0 support.

You might be confusing USB ports (which are not listed in System Profiler), with USB buses (which are). With either the OrangeMicro or the SIIG card, system profiler shows one "USB High-Speed Bus", and that bus is connected to all of the ports on the USB PCI card.

That Mac internally has two low-speed USB buses and two USB connectors. Not all Macs from that era are like that, I think the early iMac had one low-speed USB bus but two USB connectors. Either the OranceMicro or SIIG card has two low-speed USB buses and one high-speed USB bus, but with five USB connectors.

Dec 27, 2005 11:12 AM in response to RAfBOy

From an old OrangeMicro FAQ:

"The OrangeUSB 2.0 Hi-Speed PCI board uses an NEC chipset that has 3 USB host controller engines on board. Two of the host controller engines handle USB 1.1 transactions. One of the host controller engines handle USB 2.0 transactions. With 5 USB connectors available on the board, data traffic is automatically routed to the proper host controller engine depending on the speed of the device that is plugged into it. This essentially creates 3 concurrent USB buses. These USB buses allow devices to run in a less congested traffic environment. This helps devices such as color printers, scanners, video cameras and mass storage devices, which require a high bandwidth, to work well together."

Mar 3, 2006 9:37 AM in response to Darius Vaskelis

Hi, I'm about to get this card for my Mac G4 1.25 Dual Processor Mirrored Door system running 10.4.5. Have you had any issues with the sleep mode using this PCI card? I've heard that some folks (not this card specificly) have had problems with waking from sleep, putting to sleep with some of the USB/FW PCI cards.

From your post here it sounds as if you are happy with the card and are having no issues. Just a quick response would be appreciated. I've not ordered it yet. I need the 2.0 USB ports because I'm getting the new G5 iPod and of course they've removed the ability to sync to iTunes via FW on that model.

Justin :O)

I swapped it for a SIIG FireWire 800+Hi-Speed USB
Combo a while back, it has two external USB 2.0
ports, one external FireWire 800 port, one external
FireWire 400 port, three internal USB 2.0 ports, and
one internal FireWire 800 port. All the ports work
fine in OS X, I never tried it in OS 9 but I imagine
in OS 9 the USB ports will be treated as low-speed.

The only hassle with this card comes from having so
many ports. Two of the internal USB ports are on a
pin-out rather than a USB connector. I used a USB
PCI bracket on an empty PCI slot to expose those
ports externally.

I ended up getting an external FireWire 800 drive
that also supports USB 2.0 so I can move it to my PC
laptop. Hooking it up via FireWire 800 is not only
faster than USB 2.0, but it also supplies power to
the drive so I don't need the AC adapter when hooked
up to the Mac.

PowerMac
G4 MDD Dual 1.25GHz Mac OS X (10.4.3)




Dual 1.2GHz G4 Tower Mac OS X (10.4.5)

Dual 1.2GHz G4 Tower Mac OS X (10.4.5)

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Recommendations? USB 2.0 & Firewire PCI card for MDD Dual Boot G4 (1.25 Ghz

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