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  1. David Cook

    Black-Ball ADB Mouse Serial Numbers and Portable

    @JDW posted some interesting Apple TIL articles back on thread regarding the PowerBook 100 and 170. One of those articles refers to the 'low power' mouse and EMI shielding in a long ADB connector. I located one of those mice, but the cable was disconnected, so I wasn't confident it was really an...
  2. David Cook

    Macintosh Slice - a Pre-release Color Classic

    I just picked up a pre-release Color Classic. Notice that it is missing the word "Macintosh" beneath the Apple logo, the words "Color Classic" on the bottom plastic insert, and the QuickTime sticker on the lower right. The plastic has not yellowed. Looking closer, there are no signs that the...
  3. David Cook

    Battery bombed motherboard challenge

    A while back, I picked up a loose Macintosh II motherboard for the sole reason that it contained the rare (not valuable, but rare) recalled Macintosh II ROMs. These ROMs contain a bug that prevents NuBus cards from accessing more than 1 MB of NuBus space. However, the board itself was trash...
  4. David Cook

    Opening an oscillator can to determine cause of failure

    The other day, I posted about repairing some Macintosh II motherboards. https://tinkerdifferent.com/threads/macintosh-ii-advanced-diagnostic-techniques.5020/ Two of the 'dead' motherboards had bad 31.3344 MHz oscillators. I thought it would be interesting to open up the oscillators and try to...
  5. David Cook

    Macintosh II Advanced Diagnostic Techniques

    The Macintosh II computer motherboard revision 820-0228-A is the most common. Unfortunately, it is the most corroded due to using many more surface-mount electrolytic capacitors. Nearly all of the repair work is located around these leaky capacitors. The techniques described in this post are...
  6. David Cook

    Portable and PowerBook 100 Technical Note: PRAM, Backlight, and ROM Diff

    As I have been looking at the Macintosh Portable in more depth. I've run across a couple of pieces of technical information that may be valuable to other developers. PRAM The original Macintosh computers (128, 512) had 20 bytes of PRAM (parameter RAM). This battery-preserved memory stored a...
  7. David Cook

    Fixing a Macintosh Portable - What worked for me

    The Macintosh Portable has a certain cachet. It possesses an exquisite keyboard, a crisp screen, and a complete set of ports and slots. Unfortunately, the size, weight, and price were derided at the time of launch. Presently, the challenges of a Portable are: 1. Most cases are cracked due to...
  8. David Cook

    Macintosh II / IIx Battery Holder Daughterboard Analysis

    The Macintosh II and Macintosh IIx originally had soldered-on batteries for retaining parameter RAM memory and the clock. Later versions of the Macintosh II motherboard and all versions of the IIx motherboard had holes and spacing to accept batteries holders directly. (You can use these holes...
  9. David Cook

    Macintosh Portable SLIM cards

    Digging around in the ROM and source code, Apple originally planned to include removable disk cards on the Macintosh Portable. This would have predated PCMCIA cards. In the source file, EDiskDriver.a, Gary Davidian ("GGD") appears to have begun work on EDisks around June of 1988. He first...
  10. David Cook

    APS SCSI Power Plug II and NT

    A couple of curiosities I picked up -- APS SCSI Power Plug II. I assume these allow you to 'hot swap' or 'hot power' SCSI devices. Insides pictured below: X1 is a 5 MHz crystal. U11 is a MAX632 step-up voltage regulator L1 is an inductor needed by the MAX632. U8, U13 are 74HC00A NAND logic...
  11. David Cook

    Looking for the document "Macintosh Worldwide Development: Guide to System Software"

    I've been researching the Apple system routines that use LongDateTime as part of a potential solution to the 2040 problem. Because it is first documented in Inside Macintosh Vol VI, I assumed that those routines first appeared in System 7. But, on closer inspection and with some testing, those...
  12. David Cook

    Apple Desktop Bus Mice and Power Usage

    On @JDW ’s thread regarding the Macintosh Portable (https://tinkerdifferent.com/threads/powerbook-100-170-owners.4811/), he posted a link to a technical note...
  13. David Cook

    SE/30 Simasima Repair: 6 faults fixed and a working Mac

    I recently received an SE/30 that was sold as working. Without trying the machine first, I broke it down, recapped it, and ultrasonically cleaned the motherboard. Unfortunately, upon powering up for the first time, I was greeted with the Simasima display. It turned out that there were several...
  14. David Cook

    New tool to remove capacitor and rust corrosion - the dental scaler!

    I purchased a IIfx that appeared to be in great shape. No battery leaks. Light capacitor leakage (no damaged traces). I recapped it and cleaned it with an ultrasonic cleaner. With the original memory in Bank A and Bank B, I would get sad mac chimes. In Bank A only, it would chime but not...
  15. David Cook

    Assembly Patching 68K software - SimpleText

    Someone asked to have SimpleText open a smaller text window at startup. Initially, I assumed this would be a fairly easy fix by just overwriting a few constant values in SimpleText code. It turned out to be a pain -- but I learned a lot along the way. You need to have the code editor (from one...
  16. David Cook

    Restoring a Retrospect DAT/DDS backup: Attempting to crack my own password

    Back in 1992, I borrowed a DDS tape drive from my day job to back up all of my Macintosh hard drives at home. I stored the tape in a safe deposit box, until years later when it was relegated to the bottom of a storage box in the basement. Upon reviving my interest in Macs about five years ago, I...
  17. David Cook

    Apple Developer Price Lists Oct 1991, Feb 1992, April 1992

    Attached are PDF copies of the Apple suggested retail and developer discount prices for Apple II, Macintosh, AUX, Monitor, and Printer products circa 1991-1992. I was a developer at the time and I just recovered these documents from a tape backup. Example: M5510LL/B Macintosh IIfx 4MB 1FD CPU...
  18. David Cook

    Faster Baud and More Serial Ports (CSI Hurdler, SerialDMA, QuadraLink)

    I recently acquired a CSI Hurdler II NuBus card that adds serial ports to the Macintosh. Using the card and upgrading it sent me down a rabbit hole. When I received it, the CSI Hurdler indicated that it was a "dual" (HDS) serial port card, although it had all four ports soldered in place, along...
  19. David Cook

    Macintosh LC with DGR Technologies Max Expansion

    I was fortunate to pick up an uncommon upgrade for the pizza-box Macs: A DGR Max Expansion. This is similar to the MicroMac Power Workstation and the MicroQue LC Top Hat. It consists of a metal chassis that fits between the top and bottom of a stock LC case. The rear includes a second power...
  20. David Cook

    HD20 Init for Mac II, IIx, IIcx, and SE/30

    Way back in 2008, @JDW pointed out the following article in which an unnamed init could enable a stock-ROM SE/30 to mount an HD20 hard drive (or Floppy EMU emulating an HD20). https://web.archive.org/web/20030303085358/https://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=6182 "Additionally, we have...