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  1. This Does Not Compute

    MicroMac Accelerator card for Color Classic (not working)

    It definitely looks like that 68020 should not be there at all, based on this photo of a presumably stock unit. If yours came with one, but the 68030 socket empty, I'd wager that someone removed the 030 from it to swap into a Mac, then took the 020 from that Mac and, for whatever reason, felt...
  2. This Does Not Compute

    Picture Documentation of 550c Internals (especially the logic board)?

    It is definitely "banzai", I found it in at least two places inside the machine -- on the LCD ribbon cable, and also on the right side of the motherboard (and @Paralel this shot gives a bit of detail of the display connector):
  3. This Does Not Compute

    Picture Documentation of 550c Internals (especially the logic board)?

    It's been a while since I restored my 550c, but what I remember is that there were really few, if any, major motherboard differences. The internal layout of the machine is the same, as is the processor card connector (the 550c will take, for example, the same PPC upgrade card like the other...
  4. This Does Not Compute

    About that white goop in power supplies

    When I've seen hot glue used to secure components, it's just been between the components themselves, i.e. sticking two tall caps together. I wouldn't use it to glue parts to a PCB, though I'm also not a fan of gluing parts to PCBs to begin with.
  5. This Does Not Compute

    About that white goop in power supplies

    Can you post a photo of what you're referring to specifically? There's generally two kinds of "goop" that ends up in power supplies. One is thermal paste, which is usually between transistors and heatsinks. There's nothing special about it, and normal computer thermal paste is fine. The other...
  6. This Does Not Compute

    G4 Cube FireWire issue

    Is the bodge on that chip from the factory, or a repair done afterwards? Can't say I've ever seen anything like that before.
  7. This Does Not Compute

    Solution for sharing a keyboard & mouse between USB & ADB?

    Just an idea, maybe do the switching with USB? You're already able to convert the AEK to USB, so plug that into a USB switchbox/KVM. One output on the switch can go to the PC, then the other can go into a Wombat to convert to ADB. And since the Wombat appears to be powered externally, it *might*...
  8. This Does Not Compute

    Clamshell G3 keyboard discoloration

    Here's the keyboard on my 466MHz model. The fn key has a grey-blue color. I have no reason to believe that the keyboard in this unit has ever been swapped, so it seems likely that all Lime models shipped with, effectively, graphite keyboards (which would make sense, as neon green lettering would...
  9. This Does Not Compute

    Grey Clamshell G3 LCD Replacement?

    Instead of searching for keywords like "iBook LCD," you'll have better luck disassembling the display housing and searching for the part number off of the LCD panel itself. There seems to be a cottage industry in China that refurbishes older-model LCD panels -- I suspect it's primarily to serve...
  10. This Does Not Compute

    Clamshell G3 keyboard discoloration

    My own Lime machine is in storage, but some searching on Google Images suggests that they did indeed have keyboards with (what looks to me like) blue accents. Here are some photos of a boxed machine. Next time I get access to it, I'll snap a photo of the keyboard in mine for comparison.
  11. This Does Not Compute

    MicroMac 68030 in a Mac 128K?

    Pretty sure DTP means "desktop publishing" in this context. Which, early on, was really what got the Mac its foothold in the marketplace (and kept it alive during the mid-90s).
  12. This Does Not Compute

    Tsunami motherboard L2 cache card?

    Yeah, in doing some more research for the video I ultimately made on the PowerTower Pro, it sounds like they 1) did indeed ship with an L2 module, but 2) if you installed a G3 upgrade you often (but not always) needed to remove the L2 module. It seems that it came down to the design of the G3...
  13. This Does Not Compute

    Idaho Apple Haul Hard Drives?

    My inner IT/infosec engineer says that the drives themselves need to be either wiped or destroyed. Yes, historical preservation is important, but so is protecting personal information...and the likelihood of finding rare software on a random hard drive is low. As @eric mentioned, some places...
  14. This Does Not Compute

    Tsunami motherboard L2 cache card?

    A while ago I had another Power Computing machine drop into my lap. It's a PowerTower Pro, and it looks like it's had some upgrades (as was common). But while poking around inside the system, I noticed that the L2 cache card slot is empty. The PowerTower series is based on Apple's Tsunami...
  15. This Does Not Compute

    Massive Vintage Apple Haul in Idaho

    Something to consider are expandable foam inserts, like those from Instapak. In the very least they could save you packaging time and increase the likelihood of item survival in shipping, and maybe even save costs (wouldn't need any bubble wrap or peanuts).
  16. This Does Not Compute

    BlueBird-SD-Module: a boutique build for BlueSCSI in Blackbirds?

    If it helps, here's a dummy battery model I designed for the PB 500 series. Maybe it could be modified to hold a BlueSCSI board?
  17. This Does Not Compute

    Macintosh TV C195 pad ripped off

    I had that problem with my first Color Classic, but the behavior went away when I recapped the logic board. It got better immediately afterwards, though, not gradually as your Mac TV board seems to be doing.
  18. This Does Not Compute

    Documenting an Interware Booster G3 (Now with driver attached!)

    Vimage was a US-based subsidiary of Interware, and IIRC they didn't silkscreen their parts any different so most/all Vimage cards should say Interware on them (I don't think they tried to hide the relationship between the companies). I suspect they picked a different name for North American...
  19. This Does Not Compute

    1979 Olympus OM-10 SLR Camera

    Very nice! An OM-10 was my first SLR, which my parents had orginally bought sometime in the early 80s. Looks like yours has the optional manual shutter speed adapter; without it, the camera operates in "aperture priority" mode, automatically setting the shutter speed based off the meter reading...