That long thread I posted -- I wish I could go back and edit it since a few minor things are wrong, plus I have more to add. But I don't have the power to edit after so much time 
I know the feeling.
I can't comment much on the CD burner issue, but I have two machines with two different burners and they work fine with no problems.
Yeah ... I think my CD burner issues got sorted out by handling problems with the SCSI chain and the "speculative access". Looking back on it, I recall now that a couple of the cables I used were kinda suspect 20 years ago ...
I think I may still have problems though with that Pioneer DVR in the Firewire case ... will have to test that on another machine and see if it's something specific to the 9600 ... or actually a problem with the burner itself.
As for using Fetch, I've discovered that it's the devil for all of my 9600s. If you look at my post history carefully you'll see me posting about issues with it.
Hmm ... interesting.
I'm a longtime user ... since at least version 4, maybe earlier. As a long-time license holder, I actually just paid to upgrade it to latest version in the last month (which will probably be THE LAST version) ... always been rock solid for me ... up until this last issue - which I suspect was not related to Fetch itself, but rather to Sonnet's software.
Too long of a story to post here, but eventually I decided to plain just give up on it altogether. It works for ok for small files every now and then but it's best to delete it altogether.
Define "small files" ... I did two 500MB+ file transfers (@ 100Mb Full Duplex) and I don't consider those small. I'm looking for to seeing how it does @ 1000Mb.
I never did replace the FTP client because even other FTP clients gave me issues.
I'm thinking maybe it wasn't the FTP clients ...

Here's one thing I can tell you about Fetch (in OS 9 on the 9600) from watching it in operation on the 9600: Fetch's "Fido" (the dog icon) will "run" while it's transferring files and then periodically it will stop (appearing to freeze), making it
look like it's hung. It's actually not.
What's actually happening is the system (or maybe even Fetch itself) is doing something in the background that you can't see. If you give it a little bit (15 - 30 seconds or more - maybe a minute) Fido will eventually start chasing the bone again and the file transfer will complete.
It's kind of maddening, because a similar thing (Fido apparently freezes) can happen when the program (or the OS) HAS actually locked up the machine.
I have a gigabit ethernet card as well and I couldn't even get the machine to recognize it no matter what so I went back to the onboard ethernet.
What card is it ?
While much slower, it's rock solid.
Yup - onboard ethernet is solid here as well. I'll have more info about faster speeds than 10Base once I do further testing - but I suspect my problems were attributable to the inability to disable "Speculative Access" with Sonnet's software. Hopefully I've eliminated that by using PowerLogix's Cache Control software.
I made a point to mention in the thread that a 9600 is usually best left as stock as possible. The more cards, addons and mods I tried, the more hell I experienced.
Yeah ... I went down that road ... about 20 years ago, when it was my main machine. That was part of why it got tossed aside and replaced with a new Powerbook Pismo G3.
I suspect I was in too big of hurry and skimped on troubleshooting because I had work to deliver (and the impatience of youth of course

)
The only real mod I'm using is a PCI card for an SSD drive which I record music onto. I learned that to get the system stable, you MUST boot off of an actual SCSI hard drive on the internal (or external) SCSI bus. I was trying to boot off the SSD but many problems cleared up when I went back to a SCSI drive for booting. That's another long story.
Booting it off an SSD on a SATA card ... or an SSD hanging on an ATA card with a bridge board ?
Could make a difference ...

BTW - I think I saw you make mention of the stock SCSI boot drive being really noisy or whiny ... mine is actually really quiet (It's a 4 gig IBM, 50-pin Fast and Narrow)
Having said that though though, I've got a pair of IBM 9 gig, a pair of IBM 4 gig, and pair of IBM 2 gig - all Ultra Fast and 68-pin Wide - and they are all the devil, noise-wise. It's like your sitting in the chair in the dentists office ...
I actually did have some success and no apparent issues with certain CPU upgrades, but one brand of them I'd stay away from. I think I posted more about that in the mega thread.
IIRC it was Sonnet right ?
I'm suspecting that the Sonnet INIT/software is the problem here ... using the Powerlogix software seems to have handled a number of issues for me. But the proof will be really giving the machine a good workout with some long, multi-day renders ... let it chew on something for a week or so and see what happens ...
As far as RAM, I put in 768mb on my machines (advertised limit), but even that is overkill for my purposes. I'd be happy with 256mb. Actually, I'd be happy with 128mb.
For what I did (and what I will do, once I get everything back up and running) RAM and disk speed was something you could never get enough of.
The 9600 is by far my favorite computer ever.
I'm a fan myself ... that's why I still have it after 20 years.
Just recently I decided to get another 9600 going for misc. purposes. Eventually I'll have a machine dedicated to 2trk purposes, like editing samples, maybe mastering, etc. I'm pretty sure after posting that thread, I've driven up the 2nd hand market value of 9600 machines by a good bit. Maybe I should've kept it a secret 
LOL ... hindsight is always 20/20 ...
Been there many, many times myself ... what ya gonna do ?
