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Seeking Drivers for Unknown Apple Ethernet Card?

rbanffy asks: "Does anybody know what this card is? I am resurrecting an old Macintosh LC II and would like to attach it to a network. The card was inside it, but the hard disk had no drivers. It is an LC-PDS Ethernet card with RJ-45 and BNC connectors. The important parts seem to be a SMC 91c92 chip and an EPROM (haven't seen one in years) labeled 'LC ROM 44F0'. Could one of you can identify this critter and point me to the correct drivers?"

5 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Mac Driver Museum by a.koepke · · Score: 5, Informative

    You should check out the Mac Driver Museum. If they don't have the right one on their site already there is the MacDrivers Yahoo Group where you can ask.

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  2. FCC ID by NukeIear · · Score: 5, Informative

    Use the FCC ID, on the conveniently not pictured side of the card and look it up on net. The FCC keeps a handy lookup database online, just for you.

  3. Is this it? by Gleng · · Score: 4, Informative

    I found this on mirror.apple.com.

    The readme file for this driver is here.

    To quote:

    "Apple Ethernet LC driver file version 1.0.1 This driver file contains drivers for all Apple LC PDS ethernet cards and is installed in the extensions folder."

    That was, like, two minutes work on Google. What gives?

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  4. Re:And how exactly did this get posted? by IM6100 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, I've got whole boxes of old cards that need to be identified. Maybe we should set up a photo gallery to identify all of them. But I didn't post pictures of any of mine here, so oh well. I guess.

    The way I usually figure out what cards are and/or what settings they have is to boot a Slackware boot/root diskette set on the machine and read the kernel messages from the bootup. That's how I figured out the IRQ/IO addressing on the NE2000 card in the machine I run Minix on. Can't do that on a Mac, but you CAN boot up NetBSD, which is just as good.

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