I just bought an 8500 sold as working, and it does in fact boot up and work perfectly. I have very little experience with macs from this generation. I never owned anything of the 604 generation at the time, and this is the first one I've bought this time around.
What surprised me is that when I pulled it apart there is ZERO evidence of any cap leakage on either the logic board or the processor card. Apart from some rust on the audio connector block shield, both boards are pretty much immaculate.
Is this normal or did I get lucky? It is polar opposite to my experience with macs up to just a year older than the 8500...
I have a G3 minitower too that is perfectly fine with its original caps, and my next oldest after that is a G4 DA also original caps.
On the other hand, every mac I've got up to and including first gen PPC has needed a recap and some of them have been a real mess...
Are these machines from an era of higher quality caps? I know people do still routinely recap macs of this vintage, but is it always necessary for function or is it purely preventative?
What surprised me is that when I pulled it apart there is ZERO evidence of any cap leakage on either the logic board or the processor card. Apart from some rust on the audio connector block shield, both boards are pretty much immaculate.
Is this normal or did I get lucky? It is polar opposite to my experience with macs up to just a year older than the 8500...
I have a G3 minitower too that is perfectly fine with its original caps, and my next oldest after that is a G4 DA also original caps.
On the other hand, every mac I've got up to and including first gen PPC has needed a recap and some of them have been a real mess...
Are these machines from an era of higher quality caps? I know people do still routinely recap macs of this vintage, but is it always necessary for function or is it purely preventative?

