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RIP LC 575

Mike Richardson

Banned
68030
http://www.silvernetworks.net/DSCF0009.jpg

The screen wasn't even plugged in. (something that looks like a molex power plug going from the CRT to the power board was unplugged). It didn't power on at all so I plugged it in and got the screen to come on but all distorted. The fan had fallen out of the plastic and maybe onto the CRT or something which may have knocked around some convergence settings?

Does anyone think it's repairable or should I strip it down?

 
Woah... Psychadelic, man.

Well, if its the choice between opening it up and playing with the CRT settings, and throwing it out, definitely play with the CRT settings.

 
If you can't get it going again. Someone with a Colour Classic might want to use the motherboard to do a Mystic upgrade!

 
If you can't get it going again. Someone with a Colour Classic might want to use the motherboard to do a Mystic upgrade!
Of course. Those are always popular - any loose LC 575 boards are popular. The problem is I think sometimes good LC 575s get cannibalized for their motherboard. I would never do that - but we'll see if I can get the CRT repaired, if not, then I'll take off any parts I can and recycle the CRT.

 
sometimes good LC 575s get cannibalized for their motherboard
There are no good 575s. In fact the whole 5xx series was some kind of horrible mutant Mac-enstein design that had neither grace nor beauty. They didn't get it right until the 5000 series.

I say those motherboards are much better off in a svelte Color Classic which was jealously denied the proper horsepower from the beginning. This world was just to cruel for one as beautiful as you ...

 
sometimes good LC 575s get cannibalized for their motherboard
There are no good 575s. In fact the whole 5xx series was some kind of horrible mutant Mac-enstein design that had neither grace nor beauty. They didn't get it right until the 5000 series.

I say those motherboards are much better off in a svelte Color Classic which was jealously denied the proper horsepower from the beginning. This world was just to cruel for one as beautiful as you ...
Are you kidding me?

 
There are no good 575s. In fact the whole 5xx series was some kind of horrible mutant Mac-enstein design that had neither grace nor beauty. They didn't get it right until the 5000 series.

I say those motherboards are much better off in a svelte Color Classic which was jealously denied the proper horsepower from the beginning. This world was just to cruel for one as beautiful as you ...
Are you kidding me?
Methinks he has a Colour Classic in need of a 575 motherboard upgrade. Who knows, maybe there's a PM winging its way to you right now... ;)

 
There are no good 575s. In fact the whole 5xx series was some kind of horrible mutant Mac-enstein design that had neither grace nor beauty. They didn't get it right until the 5000 series.
I say those motherboards are much better off in a svelte Color Classic which was jealously denied the proper horsepower from the beginning. This world was just to cruel for one as beautiful as you ...
What he said.

 
oh i dont kno, i had an performa 550 that i absolutely loved. that machine was my main machine for about a year. even had it running 8.1!

 
sometimes good LC 575s get cannibalized for their motherboard
There are no good 575s. In fact the whole 5xx series was some kind of horrible mutant Mac-enstein design that had neither grace nor beauty. They didn't get it right until the 5000 series.

I say those motherboards are much better off in a svelte Color Classic which was jealously denied the proper horsepower from the beginning. This world was just to cruel for one as beautiful as you ...
The 575 had the best monitor of the entire 5xx series. The more common 580 was basically the same but with a cheaper screen to keep the price down.

 
The 575 had the best monitor of the entire 5xx series. The more common 580 was basically the same but with a cheaper screen to keep the price down.
That is likely true, but it was the same Sony Trinitron used in the Color Classic. Thanks for reminding me about the 580, that truly was the ugly duckling of an already deformed product line. In fact the same cheap monitor in the 5000 series destroyed any aesthetic beauty of that machine which was designed to use the Trinitron "flat" screen. Damn you Apple!

In deference to gobabushka, there was nothing wrong with the innards of the 500 series (which is why I want to transplant them into a Colour Classic). But that design ... oy, what a mess. It's like a CC on steroids and, like some kind of obsessed bodybuilder, its legs are too small for the swelled upper body and it has this huge unwieldy chunky case that just doesn't fit anywhere. The Mac TV interestingly enough was the only one I would tolerate as that black case had a way of mitigating the rushed design flaws.

 
what apple intended when they designed the 500 series is to take the color classic and add to it a bigger screen, and beefier components. this way it would be more compatible, and possibly more useful. now if i had a CC, i would probably make it portable-esq, and put it in my compact mac bag, and show it off. but my old 550 that i had, i loved it too.

 
Unless I amass a significant quantity of loose 575 motherboards, I will not sell them for Mystic upgrades. I will keep them as spares in case another 575 is broken. As it stands right now I have not had to part out any 575s. I have one loose board I got in a trade for some other stuff. My friend says the LC 575 with the bad screen may be irreparable in which case, it will be stripped for ALL usable parts and the only thing thrown away is the broken parts and the chassis metal. That's how I stripped down a 5400 with a broken tube which had apparently been dropped.

Anyone who would cannibalize a 575 just to upgrade the Color Classic is just foolish. I think that's what some of these other groups around here are doing, the other ones who buy up the old Macs at the auctions. They take out those motherboard and totally waste the rest of the Mac. That is a massive waste of resources. People buying the loose 575 boards contribute to that waste.

The Color Classic, while I'm sure is nice, is not worth destroying an entire other Mac just so it can have a 68040.

 
I have to agree with Mike Richardson. Tearing up a Mac to save an even more useless Mac is not a bright thing to do.

I strongly disagree with the statement "There are no good 575's".

I love my P578, more than any Mac i've ever owned. Sure, it ain't quite right, but its a wonderful machine, built right, and built to last. I wouldn't trade my P578 for any other machine.

 
Unless, of course, a machine has a bad case.

I once cannibalized a very nasty looking SE/30 (it was beyond bad cosmetically...someone went wild with the Mac Cracker on the edges of it) and put the logic board in a very nice looking SE (which I actually sent to my cousin). That also left me with an SE FDHD logic board that I upgraded a regular SE with. (I prefer those mostly because of the easier to remove and replace battery--even if I have an 800K drive in the machine).

 
I love my P578, more than any Mac i've ever owned. Sure, it ain't quite right, but its a wonderful machine, built right, and built to last.
I refer you to Mike's first statement:

http://68kmla.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=40993#40993

:-)

Seriously thought, I don't think a Mac should be destroyed just for parts. There's value in every old Mac, most of which have already found their way to the landfills. BUT, case-in-point ... I actually bought an LC 575 for the express purpose of upgrading my Color Classic. So now I had a Color Classic board with no home. So I put it in the 575 case and it works just fine. No Macs were harmed in the making of this Mystic. However, as indicated in the crushed 550 thread, my 575 arrived with a dented foot and a cracked monitor bezel despite being relatively well packed.

Perhaps I can find someone who loves those old cases as much as I love my CC and will take it off my hands.

 
Bad cases do have a use. I once needed a slot cover for a floppy drive on an SE and I made it out of part of an Apple IIe case using a coping saw and some sandpaper.

 
I know how you feel...I have a very yellow Classic that for some reason has a certain charm to it...she's my gimpy Mac, been through lots of repairs in the past few years, but has a perfect CRT geometry-wise. Also, the date on this Classic is August 1990, which stands out as this one was made before they were sold!

 
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