For members who frequent the IRC channel, you've probably heard me babbling on about this endlessly already. Due to my absence from these forums I wasn't able to post about this sooner. So I apologise to those folks, but i'm about to do it again. Since so many of my past liberations have a story attached, it should come as no surprise that this is no exception. It's a tale of neglect and sadness, a fresh start and love at first sight.
Well, kinda.
I'd taken my iBook back in for another "teardown and rebuild" due to fractured solder joints on the PMU chip once again. The surgery had succeeded, for the 56,317th time, but it did raise some questions about the dependability of this machine for my future needs. Not to mention it had a huge bow in the case from the new shim inside. I set it down on a table and kicked back in a chair, relaxing, the usual. As I reclined back something caught the corner of my eye, a glimmer of silver lying amongst the pile of broken hardware and scrap components.
Naturally I was intrigued and began to inquire about the slab of steel, sitting face down on the carpet floor. He picks it up and hands it to me, and says "it won't power up. No fans, no chime, nothing. Battery's dead as well, see?", pressing the small button on the battery itself to not a single LED responding. "If you can get it going mate, you can have it." So I took it over to the workbench with the charger, opened the lid and behold, it's a PowerBook G4 Titanium. I spun it around, connected the charger and pressed the power button.
Nada. Dead as a rock.
Lifted the keyboard off and pressed the internal PMU reset button, to no avail, the machine still would not boot. I looked at the charger for a moment and possibly a brainwave forced me to turn around to ask-
"Have you tried a different charger with this?"
"Yep, still nothing."
"Pass me an iBook one anyway."
So he hands me this iBook 45w charger, I plug it into the back and hit the power button. The PowerBook G4 screamed into life much to the surprise of the other technicians in the office, who had spent 2 years with this machine sitting there collecting dust, not thinking to try it with an iBook 45w adapter (although they claim they did, clearly they hadn't, otherwise it would have been in use again much sooner). However a deal was a deal, they were still glad to honour it having since bought MacBook Pros for themselves, so I walked away with a PowerBook G4 Titanium that day.
Specifications
867MHz PowerPC G4 Processor w/ 1MB L3 Cache
512MB PC133 SDRAM
40GB Hard Disk
32MB ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 Graphics
15.2" Widescreen LCD
Mac OS X 10.4.11
Not only that, their initial mis-diagnosis of the battery was also due to the charger. May I say right now that this machine has 150 cycles on the battery and still holds 4243mAh, which equates to roughly 3.5 to 4.0 hours of battery life.
Photo
It does have a few cons, the lower left corner of the LCD has a slightly brighter spot, although it's still perfectly usable and viewable. Additionally the machine has a crack in the lower left corner of the palm rest with some warping of the titanium from where it was once dropped. Apart from this the machine has none of the typical TiBook Paint flaking, and the hinges are still perfectly smooth and have almost no stiffness whatsoever (although for precautionary reasons i've repacked each hinge with Nulon L90 Anti-Seize grease).
So there we have it folks. PowerBook G4 Titanium. Liberated. I give you my word that she's in safe hands from here on.
Well, kinda.
I'd taken my iBook back in for another "teardown and rebuild" due to fractured solder joints on the PMU chip once again. The surgery had succeeded, for the 56,317th time, but it did raise some questions about the dependability of this machine for my future needs. Not to mention it had a huge bow in the case from the new shim inside. I set it down on a table and kicked back in a chair, relaxing, the usual. As I reclined back something caught the corner of my eye, a glimmer of silver lying amongst the pile of broken hardware and scrap components.
Naturally I was intrigued and began to inquire about the slab of steel, sitting face down on the carpet floor. He picks it up and hands it to me, and says "it won't power up. No fans, no chime, nothing. Battery's dead as well, see?", pressing the small button on the battery itself to not a single LED responding. "If you can get it going mate, you can have it." So I took it over to the workbench with the charger, opened the lid and behold, it's a PowerBook G4 Titanium. I spun it around, connected the charger and pressed the power button.
Nada. Dead as a rock.
Lifted the keyboard off and pressed the internal PMU reset button, to no avail, the machine still would not boot. I looked at the charger for a moment and possibly a brainwave forced me to turn around to ask-
"Have you tried a different charger with this?"
"Yep, still nothing."
"Pass me an iBook one anyway."
So he hands me this iBook 45w charger, I plug it into the back and hit the power button. The PowerBook G4 screamed into life much to the surprise of the other technicians in the office, who had spent 2 years with this machine sitting there collecting dust, not thinking to try it with an iBook 45w adapter (although they claim they did, clearly they hadn't, otherwise it would have been in use again much sooner). However a deal was a deal, they were still glad to honour it having since bought MacBook Pros for themselves, so I walked away with a PowerBook G4 Titanium that day.
Specifications
867MHz PowerPC G4 Processor w/ 1MB L3 Cache
512MB PC133 SDRAM
40GB Hard Disk
32MB ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 Graphics
15.2" Widescreen LCD
Mac OS X 10.4.11
Not only that, their initial mis-diagnosis of the battery was also due to the charger. May I say right now that this machine has 150 cycles on the battery and still holds 4243mAh, which equates to roughly 3.5 to 4.0 hours of battery life.
Photo
It does have a few cons, the lower left corner of the LCD has a slightly brighter spot, although it's still perfectly usable and viewable. Additionally the machine has a crack in the lower left corner of the palm rest with some warping of the titanium from where it was once dropped. Apart from this the machine has none of the typical TiBook Paint flaking, and the hinges are still perfectly smooth and have almost no stiffness whatsoever (although for precautionary reasons i've repacked each hinge with Nulon L90 Anti-Seize grease).
So there we have it folks. PowerBook G4 Titanium. Liberated. I give you my word that she's in safe hands from here on.



