VRAM is part of the main memory map in compact Mac's of that era.there must be VRAM on that board somewhere, right?
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VRAM is part of the main memory map in compact Mac's of that era.there must be VRAM on that board somewhere, right?

Oh no, I didn't remove it, I just took out the IC to see what would happen. It's still in there.... why did you remove it? Did you at least preserve a record of how it was connected and where all the jumper wires ran to? If we had or could figure out the schematic to the RAM expansion modification it would have helped determine if said modification was the source of the issues; there's a very reasonable chance it had nothing to do with the video issues.
Again, probably bad RAM. It probably can't load the system file into the RAM properly. You're still getting those dots anyway, right?0F0064 Couldn't Read System File into Memory or 64K ROM Mac reading a HFS formatted disk
Could you explain this a little bit more? If there were some connections on that modified chip that are no longer present, that's clearly going to be a problem.The connectors on the IC socket seem to have been soldered on in different locations as well, but those connections are gone now and just left stumps. ...
If I could just find out which leads those old connections go to, perhaps that could be the solution...