@@psivewri I've got two of these machines, although they're much newer ones that run Xeons. The serial port is a pretty basic standard, it's just a basic 9 pin that runs at 57.6 KB/s using 8 data bits with no parity. Sadly I've been unable to find documentation on what exactly can be done with the port. Both of my machines boot and I run the latest version of macOSX that supports them. You'll definitely need to either source a new or repair the PSU before anything can be done. It'll also be a pain to load an OS on it (if the drives are dead/don't have one) due to the firewire ports. I was lucky and mine has standard USB ports on it. I've not got a ton of knowledge on these systems but I'm happy to answer questions where I can.
The RAID Battery is NOT the PRAM Battery. The Raid Battery is a bigger 3.6V square battery. You can still buy them if you search for them. It doesn't erase the disks if dead, but does disable the write cache leading to very slow and erratic response.
I used to repair one of these and when my IT office closed, I took one of these with me and its in my room being a drive backup machine where I store all my importent data on it and move it to retro and old computers that can use a SSD. Aleast its not in a trash bin.
Well nothing will happen with your 12 volt rail down yes. Why not get a diagram that shows the voltages coming out of that power supply. You can unsolder the plug and connect it to a regular power supply. Can't hurt to try as long as you get the voltages hooked up right.
As for your g5 if the battery failed already it wipes the drive controller as well and prevents the machine from booting in some cases you need to try the on board video to see out of the xserve external cards only work on the core 2 duo models
Rumour has it that Apple has racks upon racks with Mac Studios running their cloud based secure Apple Intelligence. It might be the stupidest use of rack space in history. Maybe you could get 2 units in 4U of rack space. Apple could probably throw 24 individual Apple Silicon machines/modules in 1U if they really wanted. Just think the iPad logic board on its side with a heatsink, then some fans in the back and a power supply. Perhaps 48 even if you stack the modules two deep in one rack case.
@@LouisSubearth Maybe so but the form factor doesn’t make sense imho, same with the Mini’s board. Putting the Studio board in a more optimal chassis is still better than having the entire machine crammed into a rack. Also there would need to be some “external” things like some admin interface and network (both IP and potential SAN).
@@JoebDragon If this was ever to be made and sold it would be to business customers wanting to utilise the *potential* compute power of Apple silicon (if this is a thing). Storage would be over SAN to whatever storage system the customer needs (_definitely not_ sold by Apple). Each "compute module" would most likely have 128 GB of storage and if anything used to store a hypervisor and potential caching. But this is just layers upon layers of assumptions to what would _most likely_ never be a real product. But it would take up way less space than rack mounting piles of Mac Studios or whatever (which is reportedly what they're currently doing).
If you think water damage may be the cause you could try soaking the boards in white vinegar for a bit, then re-cleaning with isopropyl alcohol afterward. You could also check the caps with an ESR meter. You can have a bad cap that looks totally normal at a glance. It sucks when you get some cool free/cheap stuff but can't manage to fix it. Happens to me now and then. I hope you can figure something out and revisit these someday.
I remember admining Xserves from the G4 to Intel eras with a 2TB XRAID connected to it. Very reliable hardware, the only issue I had was the original G4 had an IBM Deathstar HDD in it.
I've never used Apple servers but I did do development many years ago on a different company's Unix servers. The Xserve looks like it has a serial port on the back. Hook that up to a TTY dumb terminal or to an older PC (or Mac) with a serial port and a serial terminal emulator program. See whether that will display any text screens to administer the server. Also, try to find manuals for the Xserve. Those would tell you how to set up and troubleshoot them.
I know industrial design isn’t really important in a server but damn, was Apple’s design team on it. This thing looks beautiful today; it must have been downright futuristic 22 years ago.
Actual diagnostic question: How long did you power them on for? ive had some servers take up to 20 mins to post. Server ram, especially apple server ram is very specific. are they original sticks or did some young it guy try and upgrade them before turfing them? did you try swapping the ram from each unit? also a long shot but are they looking for a boot drive? you could use the g4 with osx server and see what happens when you switch the drive. or try with a boot cd and see if it spins up when you hold c.
3:56 The identifier light serves both as an identifier *and* system warning light. You very likely have a damaged motherboard as in regular operation (such as when the MacRack1,1 initially booted) the light will turn off on it's own if no faults are detected 4:07 The loud fans are expected for rackmac (ppc) and xserve (intel). The fans will run at full power if no boot device is found. You should definitely look for the user manual for your ppc serves as that will give you a better indication of what the various debug lights inside the xserve are actually telling you. If you'd want some help with getting these running I'd be happy to try giving you advice as I have my own xserves I play around with for fun.
We had an entire seven-foot rack of these Xservers. They were very hungry for power and gave most of it off in heat! They also had a fibre channel option and external raid drive crates for more storage. They were very impressive indeed, and even had gigabit ethernet when most other computers didn't!
Damn that battery is as old as I am. The front IO being bridged with a firewire cable was likely a cost saving trick by Apple considering the more niche nature of these products. They are cool relics of something Apple wouldn't make anymore (rack mounted Mac Pro doesn't count)
I don't know how a multimeter works but you may have tested the battery wrong. I watched another video and you need to put the black probe on the same row of pins as where you put reb probe in the video. 11:40
The Identifier light is there only to locate the Server on the back of the rack, for booting the server you need to hold the Identifier and Power button. the PSU wasnt providing power cuz it wasnt switched on from the PC
Hello! I had 1 of these and replaced the capacitors on the motherboard. And it still works today. And blow down the motherboard with glass cleaner and brush it well. This is what I did and it worked.
I'd check the capacitors. A "pop" sound is often characteristic of a capacitor exploding. It's not always obvious, though. I had a VHS video player that made a "pop" sound. Then it made "pop-pop-pop..." sounds. It turned out a capacitor literally blew its top off and it was bouncing around the circuit board. That was pretty obvious what was wrong, but I've heard of other cases where the capacitors had to be checked, to find which one had popped.
We had one of these at the newspaper I worked at. We used it in place of a PowerPC that died it was running print operations on a large imager. These print4ed newspaper size black and white negatives that we then ran through a film processor to burn onto plates for a web press. A local Mac retailer was trying to get us to buy a few more from him, but we had a larger retailer we dealt with.
My friend and I actually turned one of the G5 models into a pretty cool looking tower PC 😂. The issue that I had kind of reminds me of what you’re going through and I had to try different video cards. A power Mac g4 video card didn’t work with my g5 xserve (so I assume an older g3 might not either) but I took one from another and it sprung to life! I used one out of a g5 Mac Pro. Hope that helps. My friend still uses this as I said it was put into a tower case and turned into a power PC gaming computer lol but he also runs modern Linux on it in a few different flavors. All these years later and it’s still a really great and usable board. But heck, I’m using my 2007 iMac running Monterey as my television set in my bedroom lol. In fact, it’s what I’m watching this video on right now! I know you still have to address the short but once the short is addressed, it’s still might not work because of that video card or if there is no short, maybe it would fire right up for you. Good luck we will be waiting for part two.
I remember these beasts. My father (rip) used a whole bunch of these in his private computer consulting business after leaving Apple Inc back in the day. He was an Apple fan through and through.
Had one of those OG G4s and it's a space heater, honestly a 2010 Mac mini would probably run circles around it. Fans go full speed all the time, and it's mostly necessary. IDE drives with ... *finicky* caddies (shorted one of them, luckily only the caddy and not the backplane). And 10.5 Leopard was the last you could run on both these. Also had the last of those Intel Xserves which I upgraded with dual W5590s... and then I got a 8th gen ProLiant DL360 which is just _so much better_ in almost every way. Remote management, parts availability, online resources, etc. The intel Xserves had some pretty interesting and obscure IPMI stuff but otherwise their "in house" server management software was quite shiny and exactly what you'd expect from early 2000s Apple; shiny Aqua interface, lights and buttons all over. Very much tuned towards schools and other similar organisations (charities, churches etc.), for the in house techie to handle. No wonder Apple pulled the plug on these - but I'm secretly hoping they'll bring it back.
Getting working firmware compatible HDD's is the hardest part. After repair or replacing the PSU you'll need to create boot media such as OS X (Snow Leopard) or FreeBSD to start the server.
I use to work with these back in the day, you need a mac computer connected to them running the server version of the os in order to access it. You don't get video out from the server itself.
I have a feeling these things weren't actually in service for 20+ years. They probably spent a good few in storage waiting for permission from the relevant bureaucrats to discard them as obsolete.
Had 4 very similar to yours. They didn't do much very well. This wasn't apples last shot at servers. but they learned in time stay out of that market. I think they made the right choice. It was a good thing they did, but sadly didn't help them much.
The company where I work had 8-9 of these, awesome machines and was I disappointed when Apple killed them off, they were incredibly well spec'd. When Apple dropped the Xserve it was the beginning of the end for Apple being in the enterprise server space.
Got a G3 Xserve sitting across the room from me. I will definitely find something not completely useless to do with it, I just need more time, I swear. I've considered running Mac OS X Server 1.0 for some NeXTSTEP goodness. The key difficulty I've experienced is finding information on remote management of these things. I'm guessing much of the documentation was in paper manuals currently residing in some corporation's filing cabinets... Perhaps I can use it as a white noise machine...
If you can figure out the pinout you could probably improvise a flex power supply into the slot and power it that way. Sort of sketchy but if it looks stupid, but works, it ain't stupid.
I had a chance to get a couple of X Serves a few years ago and really wanted them but I didn't think I'd ever do anything with them because of their power requirements and that they do best in a rack system. Then I found that you could get small racks the size of a mini fridge and now I'm mad at myself for not having a home server.
These servers (and even their Intel versions) are quite uncommon here in Central Europe as well. Still, I'd love to get my hands on one. Btw, I'm a sysadmin at a school and we still run a HP DL380 Gen6 from around 2009 :) (that's roughly the same as the last generation Intel-based Xserve)
I would try putting the hard drives from the G4 into the G5; the hard drives in the G5 might be failing and pulling too much power or simply halting the system before it fully boots.
Why Dont You Upload More? Dear Psivewri, i know it takes u long to make nice videos but bro ur vids are incredible and they put a smile on my face! EDIT: I just found out u finished moving, congrats!
If you have health insurance make sure to swab extra thoroughly because the sponsor of this video is definitely not intending to sell your genetic results to insurance firms.
Good one. I got also from a school an Apple Xserve, the last model with intel Xeon CPU. Which is ... a normal server brand apple. Mine works perfectly. Actually not in use, upgrade to the maximum 48GB of RAM, just try for fun quickly virtualisation with ESXi 6.5 for fun : Slow but works. With that said, I still have original disks with MacOS Server, but without password, I can't go further.
Try MyHeritage today! bit.ly/PSIVEWRI Use promo code: PSIVEWRI for free shipping :)
been watching for a long time. nice to see youre still going bro!
I bought the kit and created a MyHeritage site. I hope that this helps to support your wonderful channel!
lmao that segue was smooth
Dont carreeeee but get that bag
try a diffrent graphics card
Everytime i see that battery brand i cant NOT think of dankpods screamin out "ohh my PKCELL!"
NUGGETS!
I think PKCELL is pretty popular in Australia
Same!
YESSS SAME
finally someone who understands
6:28 DANKPODS REFERENCE
Oh my PKCELL 😂 ! Roll out from the table :-D .
pookcell ✓
Pkcell!
dank.
Not really a reference. It's just a battery that he used.
6:27 what a little nugget of a battery. DankPods will be proud
Holy cow it is a pkcell
I will forever pronounce that "puk-cell"
194 likes in a single day WTH
golf ball
@@Cool-Computer yes
I go for 3 months and I see this. Wow
12:12 Maybe this COM port can connect to terminal (can use COM port to USB adapter with software terminal) to check the server states or control🤔
That's a very good point, I had no idea that was possible!
@@psivewri I've got two of these machines, although they're much newer ones that run Xeons. The serial port is a pretty basic standard, it's just a basic 9 pin that runs at 57.6 KB/s using 8 data bits with no parity. Sadly I've been unable to find documentation on what exactly can be done with the port. Both of my machines boot and I run the latest version of macOSX that supports them. You'll definitely need to either source a new or repair the PSU before anything can be done. It'll also be a pain to load an OS on it (if the drives are dead/don't have one) due to the firewire ports. I was lucky and mine has standard USB ports on it.
I've not got a ton of knowledge on these systems but I'm happy to answer questions where I can.
Just a heads up the g4 xserve has a battery inside that controls the drive array when that battery dies the xserve no longer reads any disk ever again
@psivewri
Before it blew up it did seem to startup thankfully. I did also put a new PRAM battery in the G4 :)
The RAID Battery is NOT the PRAM Battery. The Raid Battery is a bigger 3.6V square battery. You can still buy them if you search for them. It doesn't erase the disks if dead, but does disable the write cache leading to very slow and erratic response.
"Oh my PKCELL"
yeea pkcell supremacy
Dude remembered he had a UA-cam channel
Dude found his UA-cam channel at Goodwill and decided to bring it back up online
come on now! it wasn't a long time ago he posted a video in here
@adidusi Dude was building his new house so he could get back to making UA-cam videos, so your comment is pretty pointless. Dude.
@@adampeprnikever heard of a joke?
@@rnntoYou ever hear of not being stupid? Try it sometime.
I used to repair one of these and when my IT office closed, I took one of these with me and its in my room being a drive backup machine where I store all my importent data on it and move it to retro and old computers that can use a SSD. Aleast its not in a trash bin.
Well nothing will happen with your 12 volt rail down yes. Why not get a diagram that shows the
voltages coming out of that power supply. You can unsolder the plug and connect it to a regular
power supply. Can't hurt to try as long as you get the voltages hooked up right.
Better to find the short first. Otherwise he risks damaging another power supply.
Great video! My friend found one of these in a school bin before.
12:03 this table is something else 😂😂
6:25 Obligatory "Oh my PKCELL!"
As for your g5 if the battery failed already it wipes the drive controller as well and prevents the machine from booting in some cases you need to try the on board video to see out of the xserve external cards only work on the core 2 duo models
The G5 doesn't have any onboard video outputs though. Interesting to know about the drive controller though, perhaps there is still hope!
@@psivewri hopefully to be honest, id love to see these running
"OHHHH MY PKCELL"
6:25 "Oh my pkcell!"
I wish Xserve would make a comeback. Silent, low power, Apple silicone, rackable macOS based NAS; that’d be nice.
Rumour has it that Apple has racks upon racks with Mac Studios running their cloud based secure Apple Intelligence. It might be the stupidest use of rack space in history. Maybe you could get 2 units in 4U of rack space.
Apple could probably throw 24 individual Apple Silicon machines/modules in 1U if they really wanted. Just think the iPad logic board on its side with a heatsink, then some fans in the back and a power supply. Perhaps 48 even if you stack the modules two deep in one rack case.
@thorsteinj maybe a Mac Studio board in a blade server format could prove to be useful.
@@LouisSubearth Maybe so but the form factor doesn’t make sense imho, same with the Mini’s board.
Putting the Studio board in a more optimal chassis is still better than having the entire machine crammed into a rack. Also there would need to be some “external” things like some admin interface and network (both IP and potential SAN).
and pay apple prices for storage with no hot swap?
@@JoebDragon If this was ever to be made and sold it would be to business customers wanting to utilise the *potential* compute power of Apple silicon (if this is a thing). Storage would be over SAN to whatever storage system the customer needs (_definitely not_ sold by Apple). Each "compute module" would most likely have 128 GB of storage and if anything used to store a hypervisor and potential caching.
But this is just layers upon layers of assumptions to what would _most likely_ never be a real product. But it would take up way less space than rack mounting piles of Mac Studios or whatever (which is reportedly what they're currently doing).
PKCELL MENTIONED 🗣️
The bang sounded an x class rifa filter cap possibly. Ive dealt with them in plenty of vintage electronics
That's more of an Apple II/III and 80s Mac thing. Most anything 90s and newer isn't going to have a paper filter cap.
If you think water damage may be the cause you could try soaking the boards in white vinegar for a bit, then re-cleaning with isopropyl alcohol afterward. You could also check the caps with an ESR meter. You can have a bad cap that looks totally normal at a glance. It sucks when you get some cool free/cheap stuff but can't manage to fix it. Happens to me now and then. I hope you can figure something out and revisit these someday.
I remember admining Xserves from the G4 to Intel eras with a 2TB XRAID connected to it. Very reliable hardware, the only issue I had was the original G4 had an IBM Deathstar HDD in it.
I've never used Apple servers but I did do development many years ago on a different company's Unix servers. The Xserve looks like it has a serial port on the back. Hook that up to a TTY dumb terminal or to an older PC (or Mac) with a serial port and a serial terminal emulator program. See whether that will display any text screens to administer the server. Also, try to find manuals for the Xserve. Those would tell you how to set up and troubleshoot them.
6:20 A PKCELL
I know industrial design isn’t really important in a server but damn, was Apple’s design team on it. This thing looks beautiful today; it must have been downright futuristic 22 years ago.
Actual diagnostic question: How long did you power them on for? ive had some servers take up to 20 mins to post. Server ram, especially apple server ram is very specific. are they original sticks or did some young it guy try and upgrade them before turfing them? did you try swapping the ram from each unit? also a long shot but are they looking for a boot drive? you could use the g4 with osx server and see what happens when you switch the drive. or try with a boot cd and see if it spins up when you hold c.
3:56 The identifier light serves both as an identifier *and* system warning light. You very likely have a damaged motherboard as in regular operation (such as when the MacRack1,1 initially booted) the light will turn off on it's own if no faults are detected
4:07 The loud fans are expected for rackmac (ppc) and xserve (intel). The fans will run at full power if no boot device is found.
You should definitely look for the user manual for your ppc serves as that will give you a better indication of what the various debug lights inside the xserve are actually telling you.
If you'd want some help with getting these running I'd be happy to try giving you advice as I have my own xserves I play around with for fun.
We had an entire seven-foot rack of these Xservers. They were very hungry for power and gave most of it off in heat! They also had a fibre channel option and external raid drive crates for more storage. They were very impressive indeed, and even had gigabit ethernet when most other computers didn't!
Damn that battery is as old as I am. The front IO being bridged with a firewire cable was likely a cost saving trick by Apple considering the more niche nature of these products. They are cool relics of something Apple wouldn't make anymore (rack mounted Mac Pro doesn't count)
Glad your channel is doing so well! Best of luck in the future Mr. Frok
@@psivewri thank you Mr. psivewri
Your content vibe is just right, keep it up
Great coffee table...
i want one lol
Oh the pkcell!!!!
I just watched every video you ever made after discovering you! Several afternoons well spent! Looking forward to new content! Cheers mate!
6:26 Ah, my pkcell...
It's a shame you couldn't get them to work, but damn it does make a good table paired with those cheese greater macs lol
I don't know how a multimeter works but you may have tested the battery wrong. I watched another video and you need to put the black probe on the same row of pins as where you put reb probe in the video. 11:40
The Identifier light is there only to locate the Server on the back of the rack, for booting the server you need to hold the Identifier and Power button. the PSU wasnt providing power cuz it wasnt switched on from the PC
ohhh my PKCELL
9:26 I love the square marked "RB4" so you know where Rubber Bumper #4 goes.
OOH MY PKCELL
At least you tried to fixed 😅 glad to see your uploads again ❤
Hello! I had 1 of these and replaced the capacitors on the motherboard. And it still works today. And blow down the motherboard with glass cleaner and brush it well. This is what I did and it worked.
I'd check the capacitors. A "pop" sound is often characteristic of a capacitor exploding. It's not always obvious, though.
I had a VHS video player that made a "pop" sound. Then it made "pop-pop-pop..." sounds. It turned out a capacitor literally blew its top off and it was bouncing around the circuit board. That was pretty obvious what was wrong, but I've heard of other cases where the capacitors had to be checked, to find which one had popped.
We had one of these at the newspaper I worked at. We used it in place of a PowerPC that died it was running print operations on a large imager. These print4ed newspaper size black and white negatives that we then ran through a film processor to burn onto plates for a web press. A local Mac retailer was trying to get us to buy a few more from him, but we had a larger retailer we dealt with.
great lighting in your videos!
A NEW PSEVWRI VIDEO WAKE UP
Try sloting the CPU in the other socket to see what that does and try other memory as well.
My friend and I actually turned one of the G5 models into a pretty cool looking tower PC 😂. The issue that I had kind of reminds me of what you’re going through and I had to try different video cards. A power Mac g4 video card didn’t work with my g5 xserve (so I assume an older g3 might not either) but I took one from another and it sprung to life! I used one out of a g5 Mac Pro. Hope that helps. My friend still uses this as I said it was put into a tower case and turned into a power PC gaming computer lol but he also runs modern Linux on it in a few different flavors. All these years later and it’s still a really great and usable board. But heck, I’m using my 2007 iMac running Monterey as my television set in my bedroom lol. In fact, it’s what I’m watching this video on right now! I know you still have to address the short but once the short is addressed, it’s still might not work because of that video card or if there is no short, maybe it would fire right up for you. Good luck we will be waiting for part two.
I remember these beasts. My father (rip) used a whole bunch of these in his private computer consulting business after leaving Apple Inc back in the day. He was an Apple fan through and through.
Should ship me the power supply, I can probably repair it and I have tons of xserve parts!
The BIOS is gone. It's useless, there's no SATA controller anymore. Battery died then it wiped itself
@@miregoji2959 BIOS can be theoretically cloned from another machine
@@miregoji2959what a great design. just like with their efi-on-ssd bullshit they’re pulling off.
Had one of those OG G4s and it's a space heater, honestly a 2010 Mac mini would probably run circles around it. Fans go full speed all the time, and it's mostly necessary.
IDE drives with ... *finicky* caddies (shorted one of them, luckily only the caddy and not the backplane). And 10.5 Leopard was the last you could run on both these.
Also had the last of those Intel Xserves which I upgraded with dual W5590s... and then I got a 8th gen ProLiant DL360 which is just _so much better_ in almost every way. Remote management, parts availability, online resources, etc. The intel Xserves had some pretty interesting and obscure IPMI stuff but otherwise their "in house" server management software was quite shiny and exactly what you'd expect from early 2000s Apple; shiny Aqua interface, lights and buttons all over.
Very much tuned towards schools and other similar organisations (charities, churches etc.), for the in house techie to handle.
No wonder Apple pulled the plug on these - but I'm secretly hoping they'll bring it back.
Getting working firmware compatible HDD's is the hardest part. After repair or replacing the PSU you'll need to create boot media such as OS X (Snow Leopard) or FreeBSD to start the server.
The chassis still looks quite magnificent, might be a cool project to pull out the guts and transform it into a apple silicon based Xserve
I use to work with these back in the day, you need a mac computer connected to them running the server version of the os in order to access it. You don't get video out from the server itself.
Love the coffee table ;)
I have a feeling these things weren't actually in service for 20+ years. They probably spent a good few in storage waiting for permission from the relevant bureaucrats to discard them as obsolete.
Great video as always! Hi from Michigan, and keep the great videos coming!!
Had 4 very similar to yours. They didn't do much very well. This wasn't apples last shot at servers. but they learned in time stay out of that market. I think they made the right choice. It was a good thing they did, but sadly didn't help them much.
Maybe you can try buying a new PSU for one of them. I found many on eBay, some new ones cost only around 25 USD. :)
To Serve Apple! It's a cookbook!
The company where I work had 8-9 of these, awesome machines and was I disappointed when Apple killed them off, they were incredibly well spec'd. When Apple dropped the Xserve it was the beginning of the end for Apple being in the enterprise server space.
Glad,THE Psiwevri we know is back.
Got a G3 Xserve sitting across the room from me. I will definitely find something not completely useless to do with it, I just need more time, I swear. I've considered running Mac OS X Server 1.0 for some NeXTSTEP goodness. The key difficulty I've experienced is finding information on remote management of these things. I'm guessing much of the documentation was in paper manuals currently residing in some corporation's filing cabinets... Perhaps I can use it as a white noise machine...
If you can figure out the pinout you could probably improvise a flex power supply into the slot and power it that way.
Sort of sketchy but if it looks stupid, but works, it ain't stupid.
I had a chance to get a couple of X Serves a few years ago and really wanted them but I didn't think I'd ever do anything with them because of their power requirements and that they do best in a rack system. Then I found that you could get small racks the size of a mini fridge and now I'm mad at myself for not having a home server.
Buy some power supplies and match the voltages and then plug them into the board
and if it works you could possibly youre own powersupply to match it
I didn't expect the coffee table at the end. That's exactly how I dealt with my two cheese graters and (Intel-based) xserve til I got a server rack.
Good on you for showing when things don't turn out all right, as well as when they do.
I had one of these for my school. Worked great for years.
Hold down the power button and system identifier buttons to switch your boot options.
Those are the nicest looking G4 and G5's ever. i've never seen em so nice.
If you could replace/or repair the power supply might solve the issue. I enjoyed the video and I was not aware Apple made these types of servers.
These servers (and even their Intel versions) are quite uncommon here in Central Europe as well. Still, I'd love to get my hands on one. Btw, I'm a sysadmin at a school and we still run a HP DL380 Gen6 from around 2009 :) (that's roughly the same as the last generation Intel-based Xserve)
Those G4 and G5 xserves used to litter eBay 10 years ago I guess most have been thrown away by now
There seems to be a lot of discoloration of the solder points for the RAM slots on the back of the board. Is that corrosion?
Love seeing these recovery videos!
I never even knew that Apple made servers! Pretty cool
Great score! I picked up a dual G5 version for free a while back. Nice to get the drives with yours, they’re hard to find now.
4GB RAM in 2004?! That's insane - some laptops from the early 2010s still weren't shipping with 4GB RAM as standard.
blud i have 64 gb ram 4gb is nothing
didnt you open up the psu that went bang? may have just been a mains suppressor cap shorting and blowing a fuse
I would try putting the hard drives from the G4 into the G5; the hard drives in the G5 might be failing and pulling too much power or simply halting the system before it fully boots.
Why Dont You Upload More? Dear Psivewri, i know it takes u long to make nice videos but bro ur vids are incredible and they put a smile on my face!
EDIT: I just found out u finished moving, congrats!
Great video! You certainly gave it your best shot.
-oh my pkcell-
I wonder if putting the boards in the washer (and giving them plenty of time to dry, of course) would help?
Not sure how you measured the 12V, the FANs work on 12 V so the fact that they're spinning should mean the 12V rail is OK.
G4 and G5 are classics people gonna want to run classic osx on them. more than the xserve intel ones.
If you have health insurance make sure to swab extra thoroughly because the sponsor of this video is definitely not intending to sell your genetic results to insurance firms.
was thinking along those lines as well. given what a scam all of these companies are… cough 23andme cough.
DUDE,,, You literally just called my monitor junk, Man I'm watching your videos on it for over 5 years now
If Apple made those using M series chips then they could be a serious competitor in the server industry! :)
Good one.
I got also from a school an Apple Xserve, the last model with intel Xeon CPU. Which is ... a normal server brand apple. Mine works perfectly.
Actually not in use, upgrade to the maximum 48GB of RAM, just try for fun quickly virtualisation with ESXi 6.5 for fun : Slow but works. With that said, I still have original disks with MacOS Server, but without password, I can't go further.
Best looking coffee table ever!
I have a rack full of these in NSW I'm sure I can get that G4 PSU working and I'd try a different video card with that G5.
canr you just hotwire a simple atx power supply to the cables? after all its the same voltage
Hope you're enjoying the new house mate !!
Maybe you need to install a os for it to work
What a mega score! You lucky dog.
Is it possible to put the G5 in the other socket on the the logicboard?
why did apple stop making servers for?
Maybe try plugging in network card and see if there’s any activity. Maybe the gpu is not compatible
No worries man, thanks for sharing was worth investigating. 🎉🎉