A little while ago I brought a ago I brought a Performa 400 on eBay with battery damage, today came the day to try and get it going again
First ting was to clean the battery residue off the board, this was done with vinegar and a lot of scraping, then washing in water to remove the vinegar, then washing in IPA to remove to water. I didn't get any pictures of this but after this cleaning the board actually powered up and produced a picture!
However all was not good, looking at the bard there was some clear damage to the scsi traces
A closer look reveals a almost perfect slice through the traces along the edge of where the battery holder used to be
OK, doesn't look too hard to to jump those breaks, First scrape the traces
While doing this I found another trace break, No problem, that should be easy to fix, Just have to solder some fine wire across all the damaged traces
At this point it got a little more complex than I intended, It turns out the via shown in the last picture was not attached to anything beneath it and it promptly floated off when I tried to solder to it, Time for a nice long bodge wire to the other side of the board! followed by another two when some gentle probing revealed a further two via's nearby also no longer existed
The other end of those bodge wires
A couple more jumpers
At this point I thought I had all the traces fixed, So I plugged it in and fired it up.... To a Floppy disk icon, damn.
Looking again I found another damaged trace, this was repaired, but still no luck. At this point I started scraping the tops of any via that looked slightly dodgy and found this:
Yep, that'll do it. One more long bodge wire to the other side of the board....
We have SCSI! (Also this 40mb quantum drive I got in another LC II recently also seems to work )
Now just to coat all those connections with solder resist to stop the wires getting ripped off the board
And the bottom of the board:
Now the board just needs a recap and a full test. Something tells me this board will have audio issues....
First ting was to clean the battery residue off the board, this was done with vinegar and a lot of scraping, then washing in water to remove the vinegar, then washing in IPA to remove to water. I didn't get any pictures of this but after this cleaning the board actually powered up and produced a picture!
However all was not good, looking at the bard there was some clear damage to the scsi traces
A closer look reveals a almost perfect slice through the traces along the edge of where the battery holder used to be
OK, doesn't look too hard to to jump those breaks, First scrape the traces
While doing this I found another trace break, No problem, that should be easy to fix, Just have to solder some fine wire across all the damaged traces
At this point it got a little more complex than I intended, It turns out the via shown in the last picture was not attached to anything beneath it and it promptly floated off when I tried to solder to it, Time for a nice long bodge wire to the other side of the board! followed by another two when some gentle probing revealed a further two via's nearby also no longer existed
The other end of those bodge wires
A couple more jumpers
At this point I thought I had all the traces fixed, So I plugged it in and fired it up.... To a Floppy disk icon, damn.
Looking again I found another damaged trace, this was repaired, but still no luck. At this point I started scraping the tops of any via that looked slightly dodgy and found this:
Yep, that'll do it. One more long bodge wire to the other side of the board....
We have SCSI! (Also this 40mb quantum drive I got in another LC II recently also seems to work )
Now just to coat all those connections with solder resist to stop the wires getting ripped off the board
And the bottom of the board:
Now the board just needs a recap and a full test. Something tells me this board will have audio issues....