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Is it a Lisa????? Is it a Macintosh????

Gorgonops

Moderator
Staff member
I'd need to see what it's connected to on at least the Mac side of the house to venture more than a speculative guess but my first thought is that the 7474 flip-flop IC is being used to convert the Mac's direct horizontal drive output into a standard horizontal sync signal. Buried somewhere on these forums (in more than one place, I'm sure) is a link to a page that explains how the Mac's analog board circuitry has a number of shortcuts on it compared to a "complete" stand-alone monitor; if the Lisa's monitor is more "feature complete" you'd need something that does that.

(Search for posts about DIY "Hackintoshes" in the old meaning of Hackintosh (or "HackMac") vs the current meaning of the word.)

 
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olePigeon

Well-known member
I was thinking that maybe it could be a Mac 128k prototype, except that the motherboard is a production board.

 

mactjaap

Well-known member
I connected the FloppyEmu to it to experiment. Works fine. I post a picture of it. First time it is on at my home!

itsalive.JPG

 

snuci

Well-known member
You've got an HD20 hooked up and it works?  That's fantastic!

If you could get a Lisa keyboard shell and fudge a Mac keyboard into it, nobody would ever now the difference :)   

 

unity

Well-known member
From what I can see in the pics, the Mac keyboard is interfaced on the back of the machine. Like the mouse, it may be a semi-perminant setup. But I have not seen clear pics of the back, but it does not look like the stock LISA keyboard interface is used.

 

snuci

Well-known member
I am assuming the Mac keyboard interface works but it would be cool to put a Mac keyboard into a Lisa shell so it would look totally like a Lisa. 

 

likanen

Active member
Sorry to revive this 5 years later but I obtained a similar 128K board with a stack of ram. The lot also included empty Lisa case with non-standard PSU in which the board had been. The seller had modified the board and Lisa by himself (afaik) and he used to work at it department of a local university. I haven’t tried it out but if there are some questions you’d like to ask, I can reach out to him. 

 

likanen

Active member
I will. There are 4 other compact macs and various analog and logic boards so I’ll try to sort them out first. That stacked memory logic board just stroke as was it couldn’t fit a compact case so asked the guy how he had been running it. 

 

Bolle

Well-known member
Would this even fit into a Macintosh shell?

It would at least need bending the frame as the board wouldn’t be able to slide in with those RAM towers.

 

likanen

Active member
Please find attached some more pictures. The power supply is with AT connector and has been attached to the Lisa monitor power in. Then Lisa’s video / logic board connector is sliced and a regular Mac compact connector has been connected to it. I know nothing about Lisa connectors so my assumptions might be totally wrong. That scsi cable is interesting. There is no scsi in 512K so it might be this has been used as test bed for fixing compact logic boards. 
 

Does someone know what is that stick with three wires?

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Trash80toHP_Mini

NIGHT STALKER
Woo, that's some pile of piggybacked RAM! :eek: One wonders if the standard A/B could run such a pile of ICs?

 
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rplacd

Well-known member
Absolutely ingenious. I want to meet the person who did this one-of-a-type thing and ask him about and how and why he did all this!

 
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