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time to fess up

coius

68030
As you guys know, i overclocked my eMac 700 to 900. Well, a bit later I tried to downclock it only to find that I did a horrible job. So tonight I sat down with my dad and looked at it really close to find out in horror that not only had I failed, but I COMPLETELY destroyed the traces and anything AROUND the area. Needless to say, I am looking for another board. So I fessed up on craigslist and am in the market for a new board

Hopefully SOMEONE bites. Because if it being the holidays and the need to save, I cannot offer any money. Only trades. SOMEONE has to have a board from a dead eMac. I would take ANY Specs. Even without ram

 
Sorry to sound like an old man, but this is the reason I never dick about with stuff like this on modern boards - they are extremely fragile and sensitive to heat. Thin traces, multilayer boards, and a hot iron tend to end in disaster if you even slip a little or leave the iron on slightly too long.

Cest-la-vie eh? This is how we humans learn best. I've had enough hand-to-forehead moments in my time. Despite being very careful every time I worked on it, I snapped the glass nipple off the back of the tube in my SE/30 once. There's few things more agonising than listening to the display vacuum filling with air through a small hole.

:(

 
coius, can you get us some closeup pictures? I would like to see if it could be salvaged by the likes of me or if it would even be worth my time to try.

*Edit

Hum, aren't there a couple different variations with the eMac lobos throughout the line potentially making a different one incompatible?

 
Its ok man..these things happen to all of us. Remember August, when i blew up my Athlon? :-/

I still have the CPU, i'm keeping it as memento from the time when i blew up the fastest computer I'd ever owned :-/ :p

 
I think it is safe to say that we will all do something of this nature in our lifetime. Sorry man.
i know i sure did, it was a doozy as well. but not to a new system. it was a old 286 or 386 wize (or was it wise) desktop.

 
heh. I'm a bad electronic engineer, I've destroyed probably 6-7 motherboards in my day. At least back in high school, I wasn't the one that blew out the SE by using a metal tool and making a connection on the back of the tube. KA-POW!!!! Lucky he didn't zap himself.

(I did however have a short in the wall AC circuit of one of my electronics projects, and blew out the electrical grid for 1/4 of the school when I plugged the cord into the wall. Ah, the smell of ozone, I know it well.)

I did just get a Newton 2000 off Craigslist that was known dead, and when I opened it up, I could see that one of the capacitors had blown, charring a decent portion of the motherboard, and even having "capacitor goo" that had destroyed a few other surface mount components. I had been hoping for something simpler, but this one is just plain dead.

 
Everybody screws up, which is what this thread is for. Just be happy you made your mistake on a relatively common machine, instead of something like a TAM or a rare clone or antique audio equipment.

 
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