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Power Mac 7500

Did all your steps. When taking out the cpu card to clean It i found that it wasn’t in all the way. Reseated it and cleaned the cards memory and the cpu. Nothing different happened.
Try a different RAM SIMM and clean the CPU pins again. After that, I'm sorry to say that the next thing to try is a replacement processor.
 
Do you have a multimeter? And if so, can you measure the voltages from the power supply?

Does the CPU get warm at all if you leave it running for a few minutes?
 
Tried looking up YouTube videos but none of them were about vintage computers. I also don’t know how much it should be outputting.
Youtube is a weird place to look for a picture :ROFLMAO:


Not verified. Take care, do not short it. Best to only have one probe on the power connector, pick up ground from somewhere else.

Best way might be to clip the negative probe to something that is grounded, (make sure it does not slip), then poke the positive probe in the back of the connector.

Make sure your probes are in the correct sockets on the multimeter for measuring Voltage, if you plug them in wrong, you are likely to kill the PSU.

If you haven't done this before, it might be worth asking a friend with practice doing this to show you how to do it?
 
Youtube is a weird place to look for a picture :ROFLMAO:


Not verified. Take care, do not short it. Best to only have one probe on the power connector, pick up ground from somewhere else.

Best way might be to clip the negative probe to something that is grounded, (make sure it does not slip), then poke the positive probe in the back of the connector.

Make sure your probes are in the correct sockets on the multimeter for measuring Voltage, if you plug them in wrong, you are likely to kill the PSU.

If you haven't done this before, it might be worth asking a friend with practice doing this to show you how to do it?
Will this multimeter work?image.jpg
 
Youtube is a weird place to look for a picture :ROFLMAO:


Not verified. Take care, do not short it. Best to only have one probe on the power connector, pick up ground from somewhere else.

Best way might be to clip the negative probe to something that is grounded, (make sure it does not slip), then poke the positive probe in the back of the connector.

Make sure your probes are in the correct sockets on the multimeter for measuring Voltage, if you plug them in wrong, you are likely to kill the PSU.

If you haven't done this before, it might be worth asking a friend with practice doing this to show you how to do it?
10 pin molex connector,

1&6 are 3.7v

2&7 are 3.7v

8&3 are 3.7v

9&4 are 3.7v

10&5 are 3.3v

22 pin molex connector,

1&12 are 4.9v

Everything else is 0v, probably messed something up
 
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