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Black screen on Macintosh plus

MattBranth

Well-known member
Hello everyone! đź‘‹

I'm in the process of refurbishing a 1988 Mac plus. For the moment, when I turn it on, it's a black screen.

I took it apart, the analog board seems to be a problem. Indeed, a part of the board is corroded. Below are some pictures from different angles:

photo1.jpg

photo2.jpg

photo3.jpg
photo4.jpg
photo5.jpg

photo6.jpg

If you are familiar with these board, what can I do to improve things?

Another problem, the floppy drive seems to be damaged as well. Below are some pictures:

photo7.jpg

photo8.jpg


photo10Bis.jpg
On this last picture, there is a floppy disk in the drive.
photo10.jpg
The read head seems to be partly detached, I don't know if this can be fixed easily.

Thanks in advance for your help! đź‘Ť

Matthieu
 

joshc

Well-known member
Make sure the brightness is turned up. ;)

Reflow the solder joints for the yoke connector and logic board power connector.

read voltages from the floppy port at the back of the machine with it switched on. What are the readings?

1666462030518.jpeg
 

bibilit

Well-known member
A lot of broken joints in your board, common issue.
 

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MattBranth

Well-known member
Make sure the brightness is turned up. ;)

Reflow the solder joints for the yoke connector and logic board power connector.

read voltages from the floppy port at the back of the machine with it switched on. What are the readings?

View attachment 47817
Thank you for this answer, there is no tension in this floppy port when the machine is switched on.
 

MattBranth

Well-known member
What do you mean? Everything reading zero or?
Does the Mac make a beep when it turns on?
Yes, everything reading zero (to measure the voltage I used a voltmeter to measure the voltage between the different holes, is that what was expected?)
And, no, the Mac don't make any beep when it turns on.
 

MattBranth

Well-known member
I will try to replace the fuse, but in that case, maybe the big black rectangle component in the input is defective?

photo12.jpgphoto13.jpg
 

joshc

Well-known member
Fuses blow for a reason. You can replace it but finding the fault on your board should be done before powering up again, there is likely a faulty component/short somewhere on your board.
 

bibilit

Well-known member
Not your issue here, yes fuse is blowing for a reason.
Try looking for short components first.
Bridge rectifier…
 

cheesestraws

Well-known member
The big black rectangle is just some coils of wire. Very little to go wrong in that.

Check the diodes immediately across the mains.

Be very careful working on power supplies if you're not used to it, you can damage yourself very easily. Pretty sure one of the heatsinks on that board is live, so be extra careful.
 

joshc

Well-known member
I think you’d need to check them out of circuit, as testing in circuit can give inaccurate results I believe.

A component tester is a worthwhile purchase as it makes this easier.

The heat sinks on these boards are small pieces of metal attached to components to dissipate heat from them.
 

joshc

Well-known member
Be very careful working on power supplies if you're not used to it, you can damage yourself very easily. Pretty sure one of the heatsinks on that board is live, so be extra careful.
Second this. Best to avoid trying to do complex repair on an analog board/power supply if you are not confident - they can be dangerous.
 

MattBranth

Well-known member
I resoldered some parts and changed the fuse. Now the screen lights up!

But I have this error that appears. Any idea?

photo14.jpg
 
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