A family friend donated a lot of his old Apple II and Mac equipment, software, and manuals to me earlier this week. The Apple II stuff is all from around the IIe era (1982-1983) and the Mac stuff (mostly just disks) is from 1984-1986, and most are MFS disks, with some 800k disks which were probably used in a Mac Plus. This guy was involved with an Apple dealership, so he had a bunch of pamphlets, disks, and hand-outs that Apple gave only to dealers-- the average collector doesn't have them.
Well, it was certainly exciting. I got an Apple //e, about 30-40 manuals, and a bunch of disks. The majority of the disks are still readable, and I've archived them on to my Mac mini for safe-keeping. Around 5 of the Apple manuals were still shrink-wrapped, and about 8 disks were still in shrink-wrap as well. The //e had an Extended 80-column card and a disk controller card so I hooked up the drives I was given awhile back (remembering to align the pins correctly) and discovered a problem.
While the disks, drives, and controller card are OK, (I tested in my IIgs) there is something wrong with the //e, and I think it has to do with RAM. I can't get any disk with ProDOS or DOS 3.3 to load. Weird noises, like clicking, comes from the speaker and cassette ports (I hooked a powered speaker to the cassette out) and a few random characters appear on-screen. Moving the controller card to other slots changes the behavior a bit, but still does not work. Copy-protected games such as Chop Lifter, Boulder Dash, and Skyfox will boot up to the title screen but not further. A disk for the IIgs will boot to an error "You must boot this disk on IIgs hardware." Placing the controller card in any slot other than 6 and booting the Apple Presents the IIe disk puts a message on screen "You must boot from slot 6"
Applesoft BASIC works, as I have typed and run some programs. These strange behaviors make me think there is something wrong with the RAM. I used an IC extractor and removed and then replaced all of the ICs on the motherboard. I also cleaned all the key caps and the plastic case. The W key is broken, but all others work.
Well, it was certainly exciting. I got an Apple //e, about 30-40 manuals, and a bunch of disks. The majority of the disks are still readable, and I've archived them on to my Mac mini for safe-keeping. Around 5 of the Apple manuals were still shrink-wrapped, and about 8 disks were still in shrink-wrap as well. The //e had an Extended 80-column card and a disk controller card so I hooked up the drives I was given awhile back (remembering to align the pins correctly) and discovered a problem.
While the disks, drives, and controller card are OK, (I tested in my IIgs) there is something wrong with the //e, and I think it has to do with RAM. I can't get any disk with ProDOS or DOS 3.3 to load. Weird noises, like clicking, comes from the speaker and cassette ports (I hooked a powered speaker to the cassette out) and a few random characters appear on-screen. Moving the controller card to other slots changes the behavior a bit, but still does not work. Copy-protected games such as Chop Lifter, Boulder Dash, and Skyfox will boot up to the title screen but not further. A disk for the IIgs will boot to an error "You must boot this disk on IIgs hardware." Placing the controller card in any slot other than 6 and booting the Apple Presents the IIe disk puts a message on screen "You must boot from slot 6"
Applesoft BASIC works, as I have typed and run some programs. These strange behaviors make me think there is something wrong with the RAM. I used an IC extractor and removed and then replaced all of the ICs on the motherboard. I also cleaned all the key caps and the plastic case. The W key is broken, but all others work.


