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PowerBook 180 - some keyboard keys don't function

luRaichu

Well-known member
Today I tried to setup RAM Doubler on my PowerBook 180 only to discover I couldn't type my name on the keyboard. When opening Key Caps it says there's "no description for this keyboard" (the built-in one). external ADB keyboards work fine.

I tried reseating the interconnect cable and the keyboard's FPC cables. I'll check the connectivity of the daughterboard as well. And will furnish a video of the problem soon...
 

luRaichu

Well-known member
I cleaned the keyboard FPC contacts with alcohol, still no effect. maybe I should try zapping the PRAM.
Here's a video of the problem:
 

croissantking

Well-known member
It may be your interconnect cable. Common problem.

 

demik

Well-known member
The wire can break inside the cable on theses. Common problem indeed. One of mine does that, cable is definitively broken
It can be the keyboard which is broken as well. Interconnect is just more likely
 

croissantking

Well-known member
The wire can break inside the cable on theses. Common problem indeed. One of mine does that, cable is definitively broken
It can be the keyboard which is broken as well. Interconnect is just more likely
Exactly this. You will not be able to see the damage visually. Some keys not working is indicative of a defective interconnect cable.

Here's another thread discussing the issue: https://68kmla.org/bb/index.php?threads/powerbook-145b-repair-attempt-needs-help.45592/
 

croissantking

Well-known member
Also - as an alternative to zapping the PRAM you can disconnect the interconnect board from the processor daughtercard. It will lose settings when you do this as the PRAM battery is on the interconnect board.
 

luRaichu

Well-known member
Just tried with a multimeter- the interconnect cable seems OK. Unless there's one pin broken because I didn't test all of them.
 

halkyardo

Well-known member
The only way to know for sure if the interconnect cable is good is to test every single pin - it only takes one broken connection for problems to occur - and even then the fault can be intermittent.
 

luRaichu

Well-known member
Yeah I'm almost certain the interconnect cable is trash now. There's only garbage on-screen now.
Where can I get a replacement flex cable on DigiKey?
 
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croissantking

Well-known member
If you obtain a replacement interconnect board, just be super careful when handling it - try not to bend or flex the cable.

The benefit of doing a rebuild though, if you’re able, is that you can select stranded ribbon that will not be as vulnerable to the same problem.
 

demik

Well-known member
Just tried with a multimeter- the interconnect cable seems OK. Unless there's one pin broken because I didn't test all of them.

That's tricky because sometimes some lines looks OK outside, and with the angle inside the powerbook the broken wire doesn't have continuity anymore :( PITA to find out
 

croissantking

Well-known member
You’re welcome. I hope it goes smoothly for you.

Thanks for sharing the link to the flex, I couldn’t tell from having a quick glance if it is high density (like a wide SCSI cable/80-pin ATA cable).
 

luRaichu

Well-known member
I don't know what you mean by "high density" but the ribbon I linked to is 0.025" pitch and should fit the original socket.
 

halkyardo

Well-known member
A footlong of cable should be plenty.
I'm imagining a 'two box' PowerBook with the top and bottom cases sitting separately on a desk :D

Best of luck! I'm a bit terrified of having that happen to my 180c any time I open it up. Certainly still possible to repair, but a bit of a pain for sure. Good on you for giving it a go.
 
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