... if there's anyone still interested.
Last evening I got the 9500 out again after having given up working on it for a month. In the month since then, a mouse had crawled into the machine through the open expansion slots in the back and had left some cat food bits, urine, and "tea leaves" on the bottom floor and some of the drive bays. I cleaned out the worst of it, and the smell has diminished. Ugh. I basically took what was a fully-working Power Mac 9500 which I got for free, and somehow managed to completely hose it in one evening. But I'm still trying to get it fixed.
Reading over this topic again, there's one detail which I left out, and that was the state of the PRAM battery. Now, there is trouble in this situation because I can't remember all of the details of events, since the last time the Power Mac booted successfully to the desktop was July 2009, and the night when I seemed to have broken it was over a month ago by now.
Long story short, I can't remember if the PRAM battery was good or not back in July. I tested it with a volt meter last evening and it was flat. I tested the volt meter itself, so it is working. I unfortunately have a collection of about 5 or six 3.6 volt PRAM batteries, but they are all dead. I need to buy new ones. I remembered that the desktop G3 had a battery in it, so I pulled it out, tested it to be OK, and put it in the 9500. No change.
This could be from one of two reasons:
- the battery is low on charge. This has been noted by myself as the G3 tends to forget the date. It is the original battery which had recorded the manufacture date and hours of usage. I noted over 6 or so months ago that the G3 no longer remembers its manufacture date.
- I needed to perform additional voodoo after having inserted the battery-- either pressing the red button, leaving the battery in for awhile, or something similar.
Clearly, I need to obtain some new PRAM batteries and test those.
If the cause of the problem is not the PRAM battery, then the final problem I think is either:
a.) I managed to nuke the 200 MHz 604e CPU card
or
b.) I managed to nuke something on the mother board by putting in the two unknown DIMM sticks (as mentioned in the first post)
I have come to this conclusion due to the fact the 9500 started up with a chime and gray screen a month ago, and didn't go any further. When I opened the case to reseat the CPU card, foolishly add those two DIMM sticks, and do some other fiddling, that's when I couldn't even get a chime or video output.