Yeah, my expectation would be, that the MackieOS would only recognize computer hardware that is either exactly what was used in the rack computers that came with the D8B, or possibly also components from the same product family, that may have small differences, but use the same main chip and driver.
So, for example, if no AGP video card was ever used by the MackieOS, then the probability of that working with the MackieOS is very low.
I think there were reports of other video cards working in the MackieOS (that had a card from the same family coming with some iteration of the D8B hardware), but most of the units I have, have a Cirrus Logic video chip on them, and were always "PCI" (not PCIe or PCI-X, etc. Just ancient "PCI").
I think I heard that some ATI chips (on PCI video cards) may also work. I have a few of them that I tried some years back, when messing around with building up a D8B computer, and none of these worked out of the box.
So, it's more "miss" than "hit" if you're trying different video cards for the D8B.
...and I think that's also where I'm currently at with the "Virtual Machine" approach.
I can boot a "Virtual Machine" with a virtual clone of a MackieOS harddrive up to the point where it displays this:
Loading MackieOS, Please wait... *
I think that's where the GUI usually starts loading, and where the video card chip and driver combination need to be correct, in order for it to be able to continue.
I tried this in Oracle's VirtualBox first, but then read that WMWare actually emulates the Intel 440BX chipset by default, that some of the AMPTRON motherboards that were used in the D8B are using.
I tried the same thing with WMWare, but also just got to the "Loading MackieOS, Please Wait..." message.
I want to pull a fresh clone from a working system (...I'm not sure if the drive I cloned for the virtual version was still booting up completely when I pulled it out of a D8B), and if I'm still stuck at the same message, will then need to figure out how I can make the Virtual Machine emulate the right Cirrus Logic chip for this virtual D8B machine.
Long story short... I didn't make any real progress, but am also not ready to give up, yet.
However, I've been incredibly busy, lately, so, what should maybe take a few evenings, is likely to take a few months to get to the bottom if the Virtual Machine approach is viable or not.
...of course a power supply would always still be needed, even if the rest of the "rack unit computer" would function as a virtual machine. So, you're pretty much working on the hardware replacement side of things right now, while I'm working on the software-replacement side (plus the needed serial adapter) right now
Hopefully we'll be able to put together a future-proof system with this together, to keep the D8B console hardware running indefinitely
(...and sorry to read about the setback with the PSU in the other thread. I'm sure you'll figure it out... that's not my area of expertise, though, so I won't comment on that thread and leave it to those more experienced with the actual electronics).