My "new" IIci's soft power was stuck always signaling on, but I found the three micro-breaks in the relevant traces. Wish I'd spotted them during the board washing, but oh well. Humorously, both could've been fixed by simply bridging pins, but I wanted to make this look as elegant as I could, so as not to confuse any future owners.
Successfully moved a 466Mhz 7400 CPU onto a G3 CPU card - harvested from a Digital Audio card that I obtained for peanuts. The cache chips are rated at 250MHz, so I guess this thing will easily do 500MHz.
The old 750L will go onto an iMac trayloader CPU card.
I was born in 2001, but man I sure do love 1980s computers! I wish I could go back in time for just a little while and see these machines in their heyday.
For a few days there, every Mac I own was up and running perfectly. Well, the Q605 still has some very faint digital noise ingress on audio, OK since that was a board with a lot of bad traces. But today the IIcx that had one corrupted ROM stopped chiming. Still boots with a ROM SIMM. Debugging..
Finally got the WiFi Dayna port emulation setup on my external BlueSCSI with my Mac SE so I can now browse the web! It decently fast too thanks to the MacEffects accelerator I have in here! This is the SE setup I always dreamed of, and it's now possible at a very reasonable price thanks to these wonderful new products for these machines.
Got a hold of a cheap IIci and made the logic board sparkle again. Lifted dull-looking chips, cleaned the legs and pads, drag-soldered back fresh. Nice new caps, no broken traces in the acid zones, power circuit works. However, either the ROMSEL circuit or the ROM chips themselves are again bad, like in my IIcx, though the machine works great with a slot ROM. Am I cursed to irradiate every mask ROM I touch?!
I bodged a dedicated reference crystal onto my Beige G3’s ATI chip, which means I can play around with the main reference crystal without losing onboard video.
I'd seen mentions of cursors flickering on some Macs because of time/RTC related problems. After taking a closer look at the RTC circuitry in my cheap Mac IIcx, sure enough, it's not the video card! After scraping, tinning, and meticulous bodging, it's all right.
I hate flea markets, unlike my children and their mother. But this morning I was well advised to go with them.
I found this nice PowerBook 180c for 30€. Even if it's dead, it would still be a bargain.
This shutdown dialog under System 7.1 is particular to the 840AV. Normally, nothing happens when you press the power key under 7.1. It’s a customisation built into this machine’s system enabler.
I’m hoping to save this 040 chip, soldered to one of @zigzagjoe’s QFP2PGA boards. I ground two corners with a Dremel to be able to attach repair wires to the missing pins, which were lost to corrosion. Might give you some ideas for yours @jmacz
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