Thanks everyone for all the responses. I have followed this issue for a month or two now by reading similar posts. From all the posts I have read it would seem that Tiger would run fine on a 350 MHz G3. I have heard many people say that Tiger is too slow for a G3 however I have read more posts from people indicating the opposite. Therefore I must conclude that Tiger is a fine operating system for a 350 MHz G3 and that comments about Tiger being too slow on a G3 must be just guesswork without real testing and comparisons. The Tiger Dashboard and wigits are some other beneficial Tiger features that should be considered. If there is any loss of speed or performance of Tiger on a G3 it probably isn't enough to rule out running Tiger altogether. I will think about it some more however at this point I am considering Tiger as the best OS for a 350 MHz b&w G3.
The issue of the compatibility of the applications is a good point too. The apps I will be loading onto this system are already OSX compatible. I will be buying a new mac soon anyways for my design apps and the G3 will become the family computer with Tiger.
Here's some info for Already Taken regarding how I installed my 250 GIG hard drive in my rev 1 G3. I first researched this issue on the internet. I bought a Hitachi t7k250 SATA drive. (It is a SATA 2 drive. The benefits of SATA 2 over SATA 1 may not be realized with my setup today but might show a slight advantage later in some situations). By the way, there was no cost difference between buying a SATA drive versus the older ATA standard and so I decided to buy SATA. I also chose SATA because, then, when I buy a new G5 (or whatever they will call the new intel power mac) I will be able to bring the drive with me because all the new macs use SATA rather than ATA (also known as PATA). Then you need a controller card. Regardless of whether you choose SATA or ATA, you must buy a controller card so that you could break the 128 GIG barrier of the b&w G3 (I think only the rev 1 has this limit)
I bought a FirmTek SeriTek/1S2 SATA controller card from firmtek for only $69.95. It is a 2 Internal SATA Port card:
http://www.firmtek.com/seritek/seritek-1s2/
I chose this card because it has OS9 as well as OSX compatibility with no need to install any drivers. I feel it is the most mac compatible card because of this.
Now I am going to diverge a little from the original question: Firmtek sells many other great SATA cards such as one with 4 ports (2 ports internal plus 2 external). Then you could attach an external SATA enclosure such as this nice unit:
http://www.iocombo.com/product/showproduct.php?productid=0EGD&PHPSESSID=3c41735b f27252cf17a17350cb603e0e
to one of the 2 external ports and you have an external portable plug and play harddrive that may also function as a backup solution. (Also has USB and firewire if you need that too) This is a solution that is superior to an external firewire hard drive in three ways: cheaper, more versatile and faster speed. SATA is a slightly faster interface than firewire. You will also need to buy a SATA hard drive for it too but still, when you add up the cost of this enclosure plus a SATA drive it still comes out less than buying a firewire hard drive.
There is one more complication that needs to be addressed with the G3 and that is 3 of the 4 PCI slots on the G3 have a 53MB/sec bus speed limit. The fourth PCI slot that is used for the video card does not have this limit (I think it is 66MB/sec). Therefore to overcome this issue, the most common solution (the only solution I think) is to use this fourth slot (the 66MB/sec slot), the video PCI slot, to plug in the controller card for the hard drive. Then move the video card to one of the other 3 slots. You will loose about 10-15% of video performance but this is a small sacrifice to make for the benefit of a speedier more responsive hard drive.
http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/firmtek/
I will probably partition my 250GIG drive into two partitions: with 70 GIGS for the OS, apps and photoshop scratch disk area and then the remaining partition (180 GIGS) will be for the data (all my files).
Hope this info helps! PS. I haven't set this up yet. All the parts just arrived and I am looking forward to installing this new harddrive.
🙂