• 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.

Help me diagnose this PowerBook 160

tendim

6502
Purchased a PowerBook 160 off of eBay of unknown condition as a project piece, and also because I wanted a grayscale PB.

The unit did not come with a power brick, so I am using the brick from my PowerBook 165c.  When I boot the machine:

  • I get the dong
  • Screen turns on
  • I can hear something spinning (fan?), a pause, and then the process repeats.  Does not boot up
Trying to boot from floppy yields the same result; I don't even hear the floppy trying to spin up.

So...any ideas on where to start to diagnose the problem(s)?

Cheers.

-10d

 
It definitely needs a recapping. That noise is the Hard Drive as these powerbooks did not have fans.

Q: No Smiley or Sad Mac? Could be bad boot blocks. Create a boot floppy disk with the 165 and try it out on the 160.

 
also screen has small super leaky caps.  Huge downfall at this age.  I am about 50/50 on screen repairs on mine for myself. the connections to the screen dont like all the movement and can let go (delamination kinda).

 
It definitely needs a recapping. That noise is the Hard Drive as these powerbooks did not have fans.

Q: No Smiley or Sad Mac? Could be bad boot blocks. Create a boot floppy disk with the 165 and try it out on the 160.
Nadda.  I tried my emergency boot floppy, but the floppy drive doesn't even spin up.

 
also screen has small super leaky caps.  Huge downfall at this age.  I am about 50/50 on screen repairs on mine for myself. the connections to the screen dont like all the movement and can let go (delamination kinda).
Are the 180 screens the same?  I recently acquired a 180 that is in amazing condition and works perfectly (with some slight tunneling on the screen after an hour/hour and a half or so).  Is there some kind of preventative maintenance I should be doing on this guy?

 
Nadda.  I tried my emergency boot floppy, but the floppy drive doesn't even spin up.
Time to open her up and look at her. Take photos to post here. But no doubt it will need a recapping.

Are the 180 screens the same?  I recently acquired a 180 that is in amazing condition and works perfectly (with some slight tunneling on the screen after an hour/hour and a half or so).  Is there some kind of preventative maintenance I should be doing on this guy?
They are not the same. The tunneling means that there is a leak along the seam of the glass plates - it's unrepairable. You need a whole new LCD in that machine. the PB 180 has an Active Matrix Screen, the PB 160 I believe is passive. Passive displays do not tunnel and would have a different connector and video driver board in the machine compared to the 180 and its active matrix screen.

You can upgrade however, using a 185c screen to get a color PowerBook with a screen swap. Nothing else is needed.

- - - - -

For LCD Recapping, ask Ferrix97 or Uniserver for detailed information. Ferrix97 did a couple posts on the subject here and a video on youtube for the PB145. The principal in doing to other screens are basically the same:

https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?/topic/23893-powerbook-145b-also-for-140-160-145-display-capacitor-replacement-video-tutorial/

 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • I can hear something spinning (fan?), a pause, and then the process repeats.  Does not boot up
If it has a Conner drive in it, it means that the head assembly is stuck. You can open it and apply some thin tape on the two rubber bumpers. this should fix the drive

 
Time to open her up and look at her. Take photos to post here. But no doubt it will need a recapping.
Any recommendations on what to take pictures of, exactly?

I did reach out to Charles @ MacApps, and the feedback I received was "the pb160 i don’t think needs caps on the mb…as they are solid chemistry caps,  now those are known for leakers in the screen and maybe inverter/BL board."

Cheers.

 
Pics of the logic board and a couple zooms into selected areas - the PSU area (a lot of larger caps there), and the large square chips. One of the back where the ports are would be great too.

 
Back
Top