I did a re-cap of the analog board on my Classic II as it was having some power issues with a wavy like screen (you could see a ripple roll down the monitor slowly).
Replaced all radial electrolytic capacitors, put it back in the Mac and still having issues with it. Worth noting I am testing...
So I just recapped a Macintosh LC 1 and everything was going okay. First time for me recapping a vintage mac. Turned it on after recapping it got a startup chime, then next thing you know the cap pops then about an inch tall flame. Quickly blew it out, desoldered it, cleaned it up, and no damage...
I just picked up a week ago a Power Mac 5400 AIO system. I’ve been playing around with it some, and it works perfectly except for one thing I’ve noticed. When adjusting brightness and contrast, very feint slow scrolling lines will appear. It only happens when adjusting the monitor controls, and...
Reflowing the solder is usually putting the soldering iron tip on the lead for each capacitor, heating up the surrounding solder back to a liquid state and adding a bit more solder and rosin to strengthen the bond.
Sort of sounds like to me that something has gone wrong in some of the caps in the power supply section of the board. If I had to guess it's probably either a cold solder joint or a capacitor that has leaked, bulging, or stopped working. If you are handy with a soldering iron it may be worth...
I picked up an Apple g4 studio display today. One of those where the entire back is clear and sits on a swirled acrylic stand.
Got it home and plugged it into my Powermac g4 and works fine. However that's when I noticed that the front of the screen looks scratched, and becomes quite distracting...