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G3 Lombard issues

I got a G3 lombard that has issues that make me want to smash it all to pieces. but id rather avoid that situation and try to work through the issues.

It was given to me missing the HDD and processor card. basically a stripped machine. it was stripped for a reason, ya know.... well i think i know... hehe.

So i tossed in a processor card with RAM, and I removed PRAM battery plug for safe measure.... Also the main battery is dead. so its removed out of slot.

When you first plug it in, the green light comes on and stays on. Press the reset button in the back, the green light flashes once and goes out. press power, nothing happens.

this cycle is never ending... with the reset button. press once, light flashes once, press again, light comes on stays on. however nothing ever happens from this. no boot.

But sometimes if i remove the power plug and plug it back in, i gotta do this several times, somtimes the green light will come on and then go off. I press power button, the machine will chime and boot. SOMETIMES. sometimes it just chimes and freezes. and i gotta go through the whole process over again.

sometimes it will chime, boot and go to the gray screen and freeze there. Sometimes itll boot all the way up into my OS9 CD and work perfectly fine. no freezing. Sometimes itll boot to the OS9 startup screen and give me a System Error Address Error, reboot it and black screen. gotta screw with it again.

I tossed a jaguar CD in there and itll boot that up. SOMETIMES.

so i put the PRAM batt back in and plugged the AC cord back in. green light came on and stayed on. then pressed reset in back. green light flashed and stayed off, no boot. let it seit for a couple hours and unpugged the AC, plugged it back in, green light came on and went off. press power, booted.

it was booting and rebooting consistently without problems. so when i thought all was said and done, i rebooted the machine again, and black screen. so i unplugged it, and plugged it back in, the LCD flickered and green light stayed on. press reset button, green light went off and nothing, so i got stuck back into this SAME cycle again.

fiddled with the AC cord unplug, plug back in and eventually got it to boot up again, but it went to the gray screen with "?" and froze. it never ends...........

I have learned that the machine will not chime and boot until i see the green light at least stay on for 2 seconds and go out, on its own. then i know its ready to chime and boot. But if the green light stays on solid, or doesnt come on at all when power is plugged in, i know it will NOT boot even when messing with reset button. I have to get the 2 seconds on, then go off condition of the green light.

Then itll boot to the happy mac, then the open firmware screen comes up with a DEFAULT CATCH error and freezes. its going CRAZY

any ideas?

 
It's gotta be the DC board. It also holds the audio jacks. I had this issue on my Pismo maaaannnyyy years ago, and I had the same symptoms. The DC board was replaced and all worked well.

Also, DC boards seem to be a weakness on the G3 models. The only flaw I have found with the G3 laptops is the DC board.

I also had an issue recently similar to this with the PowerBook G4 17" i refurbished. The power cable stayed orange, sometimes turned green, but it would never turn on. I replaced the part and at this time, I am typing on it. Fixed the entire machine with a $26/shipped part.

 
that may be. not sure... I am using a Duo AC adapter to power the machine as thats all I have.

if the machine is frozen solid at a screen, it stays that way. it never seems to "shut down" or do a hard reboot. but it WILL hard lockup. frozen mouse and all

And worth mentioning, that sometimes when it chimes, till chime SUPER loud and distorted for about half of the chime. then it gets real low volume for the last half of the boot chime. but when it does this, it dont boot either, just chimes and black screen.

 
How many Watts is that Duo AC adapter? A Lombard should use a 45 Watt adapter. Duo adapters come in 18, 25, and 36 Watt varieties. It may just not be getting enough juice.

 
Take the output voltage and current listed on the label and multiply them. That is, "Output 24V" x "1.04A" = 25 Watts. Your Lombard will want 1.7 Amps or more at 24 volts. Otherwise, the power supply may collapse when the hard drive tries to spin up or at some other power-hungry part of the boot process. If that 45VA is output power, it's enough. If it's referring to 50/60 Hz AC input, the adapter is probably too small.

Of course there may be something else wrong as well, but make sure you have the right power adapter first. You can boot a Lombard off of a 36 Watt (1.5A) Duo adapter if the Lombard has a good battery to help out.

 
if the machine is frozen solid at a screen, it stays that way. it never seems to "shut down" or do a hard reboot. but it WILL hard lockup. frozen mouse and all
That sounds like a CPU lockup to me. ISTR there was a known issue with some of the faster (400MHz?) CPU modules for the Lombard locking up like this. Or it could be overheating - worth checking the heat transfer (pad? paste?)

 
You can boot a Lombard off of a 36 Watt (1.5A) Duo adapter if the Lombard has a good battery to help out.
I am not sure about the differences in power requirements between the two but I was running my mildly loaded PDQ(with no batt) off a 25W Duo adapter for a fair while after I got it and only a few times it needed more than the adapter could give. I had to load absolutely everything to draw too much. Now, I would not really recommend running any power supply that close to it's limit but it is good enough for testing I suppose. *shrug*
 
its a 333 CPU i belive.

It isnt a heat issue, because when the machine is flat cold it still wont startup or bong or spin anything until i monkey with it for a half an hour unplugging, plugging in AC cord, pressing power, reset, blah blah blah.

But its at the point now, it will NOT boot successfully anymore. it always boots up to a System Address Error when it does boot into the OS, every 1/99 tries itll boot to the gray screen and begin to load the OS. but the other 98 tries it never boots or sometimes bongs with black screen, or does all kinds of stupid crap.

 
Anyone have an apple hardware test ISO for this model? maybe itll tell me what it is.

Edit: I it finally managed to boot OS9 again, but it popped up a dialog that said something along the lines of "the built-in memory detected a problem with cache-memory" then i clicked off the dialog too fast before i could read it all. i got a bad habit of that.

But i rebooted it again, and it system errored out again with illegal instruction.

illegal instruction?? Yeap, sounds like the processor card is toast :-( sucks too.

 
"the built-in memory detected a problem with cache-memory"
Yeah. From memory (sorry) that was the issue with those CPU modules - bad cache. A quick Google for "lombard cpu lockup" turned up loads of hits. Have a look at xlr8yourmac.com. Seriously, it's a known issue. There was a bad batch of CPU modules, and unfortunately, if I remember correctly, it was amongst the 400MHz ones.

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Considering the problems in reliability the "Professional PowerBooks" have sometimes, that's why I got a G3 iBook clamshell 366MHz graphite SE Tokyo Revision B model. Not as fancy, not as fast, not as easy to fix when something does break, but except when the temperature in our little part of the world gets too hot (at which point it flakes out until it cools off again, then it will resume (as proper as possible) operation.

Strange that NVRAM and PMU reset key combos act like they should but have no effect though, even with the battery removed, but oh well-it still is an awesome baby. And no, I don't mind trading incredible reliability in a considerably used 10 year old laptop for its toilet seat looks...because it's Graphite!

Hope that helps somehow!

 
this one is a 333 CPU. but i keep getting the cache error in OS9 when it does boot. so its shot.

ill have to replace it when i get some funds.

 
its the solder on the CPU card that has cracked/failed.

If i push on the CPU card while the machine is booting, i get an instant system error of either address error, bus error, or illegal instruction.

then it doesnt boot again.

but if i take and put some force on the CPU itself alone, only, it boots everytime, straight into OS9 and no more cache errors.

problem found. once i head into the shop tomorrow, ill toss it on the reflow bench and give it a whirl.

 
It sings happily ever after.....

I reflowed the CPU and the chipset that is on the CPU card, and the machine now runs perfect. and even a bonus to boot: the battery started charging and has developed a full charge. something that it DIDNT do before.

no more random freezes, crashes, and no more cache errors.

 
That's awesome techknight! :D

Have fun with your working G3 Lombard, great laptop, if only mine had a battery that would charge. :p

 
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