Maybe I missed the point of your post with my last response, Captain
The goal of using Virtual Box/Linux/Wine, is of course to create a virtual machine with emulated hardware components, that is close enough to the hardware Mackie used in the D8B rack units, to fool it into believing that it runs on the actual hardware (without having to make modifications to the MackieOS.exe or the other files it relies on, that are part of the Mackie OS installation).
In other words, the precise hardware that is being emulated has EVERYTHING to do with if there will be a chance to get the MackieOS.exe to run in a virtual environment or not.
What I meant in my last post was, that the actual computer hardware I'm running the virtual machine on, doesn't have much to do with this experiment succeeding or not.
In fact, my whole goal with taking this approach was, to have a cross-platform solution, that (if successful) would work on many different kinds of computers, to replace the actual D8B rack unit (no matter if they're MacOS or Windows or Linux based... as long as they can run the free Oracle VM Virtual Box software, to run a custom machine that can launch the MackieOS.exe).
(Any such solution would then still require that a SPECIFIC USB/Serial adapter with two ports would be used to hook the D8B up to... but I'm far away from reaching this point... first, I need to get the Mackie OS to get a little further than the page fault... then solve likely issues with video card hardware emulation, etc., before attempting to add serial port hardware. So, figuring out that crucial part (i.e. the requirement that two serial ports exist to communicate with the Console), will need to happen at a later point).
Now that I have at last the Virtual Machine thing working, I also intend to create a clone of the Mackie OS harddrive, that already comes with everything it needs to boot... then trying booting that again from all the 32-bit hardware emulations VirtualBox/Wine offers. But I expect that I would still have to customize the hardware VirtualBox/wine expose to the Mackie OS that runs on the virtual box. But with this approach, I'd at least get around any sort of custom calls the Mackie OS would make to, for example, the boot sector or file system to ensure it's an authentic system (e.g. the finicky harddrive formatting issue when installing the Mackie OS, that usually doesn't take a regular FAT or FAT32 formatted drive, etc.).
Anyway... again, this is just the beginning. It means that I have something I can experiment with.
If someone has a clue about this stuff and would like to jump in without having to create the virtual machine and install Wine from scratch, let me know. It should be possible that I share the Virtual Box "Virtual Machine", and others should be able to load it on their end and make their own experiments. (However, I think if trying different chipsets in Virtual Box, you'd probably have to install the virtual machine from scratch every time, anyway, since Linux would then install different drivers, before adding Wine on top for the Windows environment).
Anyway... sorry for the ramble. Hey, but if you ever tried to read "Ulysses" or anything by Virginia Woolf, my blathering here is just light (and comparably coherent) conversation, haha