Power Macintosh · The Beige Era · 1997

Power Macintosh 6500

The 6500 pushed the consumer tower line faster just before the G3 era and Jobs-era simplification wiped the slate clean.

Power Macintosh 6500 (1997), Power Macintosh by Apple

Power Macintosh 6500: key facts

When was the Power Macintosh 6500 released?

The Power Macintosh 6500 was released in February 1997. Apple discontinued it in March 1998.

How much did the Power Macintosh 6500 cost?

The Power Macintosh 6500 launched at $2,000 in 1997 — about $3,980 in today’s money (approximate, US CPI).

What are the Power Macintosh 6500’s specs?

The Power Macintosh 6500 used a PowerPC 603e running at 225 MHz, with 32 MB of memory and 2.9 GB of storage. It ran System 7.

Why does the Power Macintosh 6500 matter?

Faster consumer mini-tower near the end of pre-G3 Apple.

Full specifications

CPUPowerPC 603e · 225 MHz
Cores1
Memory (RAM)32 MB (up to 128 MB)
Storage2.9 GB
DisplayExternal display
GPUIntegrated / NuBus video
PortsSCSI, ADB, serial
WeightVaries by configuration
DimensionsMini-tower
Operating systemSystem 7
ReleasedFebruary 1997
DiscontinuedMarch 1998
Launch price$2,000

How the Power Macintosh 6500 compares to today

A 16 GB Apple Silicon MacBook Pro has about 512× more memory than this device shipped with.

At 225 MHz, the clock is roughly 14× slower than a single performance core of a 16 GB Apple Silicon MacBook Pro — and that is before counting cores, width and IPC.

All of this storage holds about 750 modern phone photos.

Launched at $2,000 in 1997 — about $3,980 in today’s money (approx., US CPI).

Cross-architecture speed figures are clock-only and approximate; inflation figures use US CPI.

Did you know?

It is the kind of model collectors use to map Apple’s complicated family tree.

Related Power Macintosh models

Open the Power Macintosh 6500 in the interactive archive →

Last updated: 2026-06-27