• Hello MLAers! We've re-enabled auto-approval for accounts. If you are still waiting on account approval, please check this thread for more information.

Freshly Restored SE/30

Reasons.

6502
So I've just finished up restoring a SE/30 I received a few weeks ago. When I got it it was in decent shape. It had all the parts it was supposed to have, and it (sometimes) booted. It also had an ethernet card, which was really nice. It was beginning to show capacitor rot, however, so I figured it would be a good candidate for a total restoration. 

My first step was to send the logic board off to uniserver. While he did his work on the board, I took the whole machine apart and wiped all of the electronics down with isopropyl alcohol. I lubricated the floppy drive, and gave the case a nice bath with soap and water, and used some Dot 3 brake fluid to clean off a stencil that someone had sprayed onto the side. After that, I waited for the next sunny day and retrobrited the front bezel, rear bucket, and keyboard and mouse. I just submerged the parts in a mixture of 3% hydrogen peroxide and water, which ended up working really well. After my board got back from uniserver, I put the whole thing back together, put in a SCSI2SD in place of the internal drive, and installed System 7 Pro. I ended up with an SE/30 with 8 MB of RAM and a 256 MB hard drive.

The whole thing is working fantastically now, and I'm really proud of the results I got. While it's not quite done yet (I've got a replacement Noctua fan coming in the mail and am looking to get my hands on a ROMinator II and some 16 MB SIMMs), it's a pretty sweet machine that was as much of a pleasure to restore as it is to use. I think I'm going to bring it back to college with me next year and use it for working on essays and other work that doesn't require the internet. Word 5.1a is solid gold, and I could certainly use a less distracting writing environment. 

Lastly, I just wanted to thank everyone in this community for their contributions over the years. I've learned a lot about this stuff in my month on here so far, and that knowledge was instrumental in getting this done. This community is a really good reflection of the promise of the internet: a place where people can come together to talk about things they're really passionate about and to help each other out. I'm glad it exists. Special thanks go to oldappleguy for gifting me the machine, and to uniserver (absent though he may be) for his really good work on the board. 

IMG_0812_zpsmeewrcex.jpg.cb28b081a1428f6e6e4e41afea32a495.jpg


IMG_0815_zpsjcnsrtve.jpg.f92c63cbeb34aa8ef8d754cd122f70bb.jpg


84806ed3-af27-4927-acdb-042e6ebbce07_zpsnlghkh5d.jpg.d8a25fa4974618d720088adecd2fc177.jpg


 
Last edited by a moderator:
Nicely done! That is fine looking SE/30, and that keyboard is oh so damn nice!

Did any of the silver inner paint come off when you did the bathe/peroxide?

 
Well done!

If you ever want to retrobrite the bucket, olePigeon has some good tricks... i think using a gallon water bottle full of water to displace the hydrogen peroxide and something to keep it submerged? The thread's on here somewhere. I've only ever retrobrited (avoiding oxy) with the 3% submersion and I've been really happy with the results.

 
What proportions of 3% hydrogen peroxide to water did you use?

(Also, what's the program that is running on the screen - something based in Hypercard?)

 
Thanks for the compliments, guys! I think the keyboard is the piece that I'm most proud of. It cleaned up really nice.

None of the silver paint came off during the retrobrite process, thankfully. It was pretty unfazed by the whole thing.

I ended up using about 2:1 hydrogen peroxide to water. That wasn't super exact, but it worked well for the sun level where I'm at.

I actually did do the bucket, though it didn't turn out as well as I would like. I might take another pass at it a little later, but for now I think I'm a little spent.

The program running on the screen is Civilization 1.0, a really large hypercard program detailing the history of western civilization. I found it on the Garden at one point, and it blew me away. It's one of my favorite things to demo to people, because it's something that is really unique to that era of the mac. (On a related note, if anyone has the 20th century supplement to it, get in touch with me. I'd like it very much.)

 
Back
Top