Hi all! I'm new here, always wanted an old compact Mac, but in my country (argentina), these are difficult to find, not to mention quite expensive.
A few days ago, talking old tech stuff with a co-worker, he told me he had one, probably non-working, as it was about to be tossed in a former job. He had it stored for 10 years. Of course I accepted!
It was a very (dark) yellow SE, originally 2x800K floppies, upgraded to a SCSI drive. I checked everything for obvious damage before plugging in for the 1st time, no apparent leaky or bulged capacitors (I know these still can be dry), and even the battery, a Tadiran with (I guess an expiration) date of 1989 didn't leak! (it even holds a very little charge).
This is a rev B board, with a socket for the battery. I cleaned everything, put it back together and fired it up: just a ticking noise from the PSU. The fan barely spin 1/2 a turn with each tick (the fan itself spins freely by hand).
I tested the PSU in isolation, no ticking and all the correct voltages are present.
As per Pina's book for similar symptoms, I tried replacing capacitors CR2 and CR3 and transistor Q2 (a BU406) in the analog board.
I also re-soldered any suspicious solder point (even though none seemed broken).
I just tested and... I was happy for a few seconds: no more ticking! the fan was spinning and a clear and loud chime was heard. But, no video, nothing.
Obviously checked the brightness. not that easy unfortunately.
I tried this a couple of times, the last one, without the backcase, I was trying to see if the neck was glowing: I didn't notice anything, but I also didn't have much time: Q2, the one I replaced, burst undramatically in a very faint puf of smoke... immediately it was back to square 1: ticking noise from the PSU! (No fan, no chime).
I understand that this ticking noise is the PSU's protection.
Any ideas what could be blowing this transistor??? it happened at least twice...
I know that ideally I should recap the thing, but wanted to see if it worked at all. Also, asked locally in a lot of places for a few caps, like the 3.9uf one, and can't find it!
thanks in advance!
A few days ago, talking old tech stuff with a co-worker, he told me he had one, probably non-working, as it was about to be tossed in a former job. He had it stored for 10 years. Of course I accepted!
It was a very (dark) yellow SE, originally 2x800K floppies, upgraded to a SCSI drive. I checked everything for obvious damage before plugging in for the 1st time, no apparent leaky or bulged capacitors (I know these still can be dry), and even the battery, a Tadiran with (I guess an expiration) date of 1989 didn't leak! (it even holds a very little charge).
This is a rev B board, with a socket for the battery. I cleaned everything, put it back together and fired it up: just a ticking noise from the PSU. The fan barely spin 1/2 a turn with each tick (the fan itself spins freely by hand).
I tested the PSU in isolation, no ticking and all the correct voltages are present.
As per Pina's book for similar symptoms, I tried replacing capacitors CR2 and CR3 and transistor Q2 (a BU406) in the analog board.
I also re-soldered any suspicious solder point (even though none seemed broken).
I just tested and... I was happy for a few seconds: no more ticking! the fan was spinning and a clear and loud chime was heard. But, no video, nothing.
Obviously checked the brightness. not that easy unfortunately.
I tried this a couple of times, the last one, without the backcase, I was trying to see if the neck was glowing: I didn't notice anything, but I also didn't have much time: Q2, the one I replaced, burst undramatically in a very faint puf of smoke... immediately it was back to square 1: ticking noise from the PSU! (No fan, no chime).
I understand that this ticking noise is the PSU's protection.
Any ideas what could be blowing this transistor??? it happened at least twice...
I know that ideally I should recap the thing, but wanted to see if it worked at all. Also, asked locally in a lot of places for a few caps, like the 3.9uf one, and can't find it!
thanks in advance!
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