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Happy ending to my SE/30 saga

srieck

6502
After recapping the logic board, resoldering all of the contacts on the analog board and installing a new hard drive, I'm happy to report that my SE/30 is now 100% with no simasimac and finally sound!

Big thank you to everyone who offered the tips that made this possible!!!

 
Marvelous! Now that you've got that fixed, are you planning on modding it to the extreme or keep it simple? What's it's current specs, please?

73s de Phreakout. :rambo:

 
I can't thank you enough for literally giving me the step by step...It miraculously came with 32MB of RAM installed...I put a 500MB scsi drive in there and tested it all with Apple Personal Diagnostics...All tested ok so I'm just gonna leave it as is...(and force my 6 year old to play some retro games with me...that won't be tough)

 
You're welcome. 8-) Now, as a real challenge, get that SE/30 online by following Mk.558's article in this section of the site.

73s de Phreakout. :rambo:

 
I got mine by posting a WTB ad here. The seller was helpful and responded to my request to include a floppy with HD SC Setup (patched version).

There are other types, such as LocalTalk -> Ethernet, SCSI -> Ethernet, and of course the PDS slot. If you get one without a RJ45 style connector you might have to fiddle with either a serial adaptor or a ThinNet adapter, which requires tedious termination and setup procedures; none of which I am famarilar with because I decided from the start to get an RJ45 card -- the other protocols which were swirling around in the networking pool back in the day like TokenRing, ThinNet, ...and so forth never quite took off -- but Ethernet did.

Heck I just checked eBay right now, and this shows up. They are common, but also not so common because the only people really left with them are enthusiasts. (Just like old BMWs, Porsches or vintage cars...or anything like that)

Don't forget that the IIsi also has a 030 PDS slot, and it is compatible with the SE/30. If all else fails, you could look at a NuBus adapter and use a NuBus card.

They can vary in price, be prepared to pay about 30-50$ for them. They are worth it -- floppy disks get old real fast.
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Unfortunately there isn't really a "USB Flash Drive" in the old days like today -- they are really very very useful.

Actually the one you see there is probably better than mine -- it has a 90º slot for an additional card, for an accelerator (up to 50MHz), color card (you'll feel the performance hit, we had one of these things hooked up to a 13" back in '95 or so) or other things.

 
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