• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

Compact Mac Screen Width Adjustment Tool

just.in.time

Well-known member
Hi,

To adjust the screen width of a compact Mac, you need a plastic hex tool (as the adjustment at L2 is a ferrite core, etc etc).

I want to order the tool, however I can't find what size the tool is.  Hex tools are usually measured in mm or fractions of an inch.

Does anyone know the correct size?

Thanks

 

techknight

Well-known member
I always used chopsticks. They seem to work ok. 

As far as the actual slug adjustment tool set, I have no idea. Back in the day they used to sell those kits for servicing radios and TVs, but they seemed to have vaporized. 

 

just.in.time

Well-known member
Okay.  Found some TV adjustment kits on Amazon for around $13.  If the chopsticks idea fails, I may drop an order in for that kit.

I tried the plastic end of a paint brush that I had taken some sand paper to, but no go.

It almost seems like the ferrite core is jammed in place.

Should I try taking a hair dryer to that clear plastic tube to see if it will help loosen?  I'm slightly hesitant to apply heat to that area with the two capacitors immediately next to it.

 

just.in.time

Well-known member
Went and got some Panda Express to get some chopsticks.  I sanded them down to size, and they get good grip.  However, that core is locked in tight.

I set my solder rework station hot air gun to the lowest it would go (212 degrees F) and tried heating the plastic tube for a minute, but still no give :-/

Any ideas?

 

trag

Well-known member
Sheewww, that's likely a bad situation. Those cores are hard to impossible to unstick. We had a long discussion around here a few years ago about L2 and maybe making replacements.

 

just.in.time

Well-known member
I think you are right trag.  Its starting to look like it is breaking apart inside the clear tube.  That's unfortunate.  Despite that, it also doesn't look like it will be easy to just break apart and clean out.

Is that whole assembly for L2 (the clear tube, the ferrite core, and the wound wire at the base) replaceable?  If so, can I swap it for the equivalent part on a Mac Plus analog board?  Or do I need one from the SE line?

 

nvdeynde

Well-known member
The ferrite cores are very fragile. It's best to adjust them only if it's really necessary like after Flyback replacement.

The part is the same in Compact Macs  from an 128K to an SE/30 as they use the same flyback.
I've exchanged them with success between these boards. Haven't tried it with the Classic I/II as they use another Flyback. 

I adjust them with a standard metal throrx screwdriver, but with the Mac turned off during adjustment. Otherwise the screwdriver will get very hot in just a few seconds and damage the ferrite core.

 

techknight

Well-known member
If it wont move, tis because its already cracked. someone may have tried to twerk on it in the past and broke it. 

 

just.in.time

Well-known member
That honestly wouldn't surprise me. The previous owner also had the speaker hooked up reverse polarity (they had to physically force the connector), among other odd decisions.

 
Top