The first in the Macintosh LC family, the LC was introduced with the Macintosh Classic (a repackaging of the older Macintosh Plus) and the Macintosh IIsi (a new entry-level machine for the Macintosh II series), and offered the same overall performance as the Macintosh II for half the price.
Some names you may have heard of are Sony, CTX (I highly recommend CTX monitors – I am using one now and have found it to be of very good quality), Relisys, NEC, and ViewSonic.Adam Robert Guha - 2000.10.31You could buy an adapter with switches (to set the resolution), but I have never found that necessary. The HPV card can accept up to 4 MB of VRAM and show millions of colours.
Apple also (I think) lists it as a Performa 575.If the fault is in the monitor section, there is not much one can or should do. However, with the 6100/60AV and 6100/66AV, you have a separate video (AV) card with 2 MB of VRAM that lets you use almost any type of Mac or PC monitor at resolutions up to 1152 x 870.
2 original Apple Macintosh LC computers - both with monitors, keyboards and mouse: Mac LC working perfectly and loaded with vintage games from 1980s/1990s! Although the LC III looks effectively identical to the LC II before it, internally the LC III has significant improvements including a faster processor on a 32-bit bus, support for faster and more RAM and improved graphics capability.
An Apple IIgs RGB monitor is *NOT* compatible with a Macintosh, or vice versa. You cannot, however, use it with a new Studio Display (or flat panel) Apple monitor. Excellent condition. Apple Macintosh Performa LC 475 with monitor, keyboard and mouse. It replaced the commercially successful Macintosh LC II in Apple's lineup of mid-range computers, and was significantly faster, with MacWorld Magazine benchmarks showing 2x performance in all major categories - CPU, disk, video and math. Macintosh LC to VGA. Hard drive failure is a big issue with Macs this old. Does anyone have any idea if this is a dead PRAM battery? Try the “switchless” model first, and if it doesn’t work (it almost always does), then go out and buy the one with switches. This monitor was a popular model to go with the LC III’s replacement, the LC 475. Type : M0350 The first in the Macintosh LC family, the LC was introduced with the Macintosh Classic (a repackaging of the older Macintosh Plus) and the Macintosh IIsi (a new entry-level machine for the Macintosh II series), and offered the same overall performance as the Macintosh II for half the price. The LC 620 came in one-piece case and proved to be a popular home model.