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    I Got An M3 MacBook Pro; Obsolescence Forced My Hand

    Why not Pages? Numbers is a bad joke, but Pages and Keynote are solid propositions. As a writer, though, I’d consider more specific applicatios, such as iA Writer (https://ia.net/writer).
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    Color Classic input voltage question

    In sheer honesty, I have no clue, but I would be very surprised if the board had been tweaked for working at 110 V only. The official specs are reading variable voltage input. https://support.apple.com/en-ca/112200 Could be that on some markets the regulatory labeling mandates to conform only...
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    Color Classic input voltage question

    The only fixed voltage analog board that I have ever encountered is the one of the original 128k. Anyhow, I have a Performa 275 (a CCII sold only in Asia), and that one is rated 100-240 V, 50/60 Hz, 2A.
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    I measured on the second line of pins starting from the rear of the machine. The rows are marked on the board, from 1 to 32, so I should have picked the right one. I was very surprised to see such a messy situation triggered by a simple voltage measurement, and I got very scared as at first the...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    I wish you a smooth relocation, all the rest is now unimportant.
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    @JDW The meter is a Fluke, don’t remember by heart the model name, but it’s a recent one. By default, it works in auto range mode, so maybe this caused some fluctuation on the drained current which disturbed the CPU operations. However, I must admit it was very strange as the voltage rail...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    So, I have tried the proposed hack (tapping +5V from PDS position A2 for feeding the BlueSCSI board and preventing the Wi-Fi crash), but strange (and scary!) things happened. At first, I just wanted to monitor the status of the A2 pin in different conditions (off, sleep, battery, PSU etc). So, I...
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    Need Advice: What's A Good After-Market Battery For A Clamshell iBook?

    It’s a pack of 18650 cells. Doable, but not for everyone. https://davidigreen.com/blog/ibook-battery-rebuild
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    Yeah, not a very technical description, I must admit… I just go by heart, I must still have somewhere some diodes I bought for refurbishing a busted PSU rectifier. So, heavy duty, chunky ones. By the indications you shared, I should be able to source an appropriate component, hopefully on...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    I see we're eventually converging, I also have collected evidence that an "always on" solution works (I used a bench PSU). Bar for the busted pico which is still a complete mystery to me, in the end we expereince the same issues. So, I will consider the proposed solution, however I only have PSU...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    So, today I spent some time testing step by step different incremental configurations. System 6, System 7, with various HD drivers. Everything works fine, until the moment I add in to the picture the Wi-Fi thing. At that point the crash happens again (I guess the same situation already reported...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    So, seems there’s light at the end of the tunnel… First off, if I use the same SCSI device on the external bus, everything works. So, it must be about the way the Portable is accessing the internal bus, which is likely managed by the software… and, bingo! When I use System 6.0.8, everything...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    The Conner drive was specifically designed to be a SCSI 0 ID device, somehow hard locked. The internal connector on the Portable does not map the TPWR SCSI pin 26, I assume because there is no need. However, regular 50 pin SCSI devices do use this pin, including BlueSCSI. Now, the adapter I have...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    I took my bench PSU and powered the BlueSCSI independently from the Portable. Issue gone: when the board is constantly powered up, there's no crash, I can put it on sleep and wake it up indefinitely. So, I'd conclude it's not just a matter of pull up resistors, but also about the way the Mac...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    I don’t think the BlueSCSI board is damaged, it seems to work flawlessly. I just did some quick test measuring the voltage directly at the molex on the 5V rail. With the power supply connected, on wake up the voltage is restored only after the initial refresh of the desktop is completed (the...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    Thanks for the clear explanation. I would like to have the time for deep diving into the complete documentation of Pico and BlueSCSI board, but indeed I don’t have any. I did the same check measuring 3V3 (OUT) pin. What happens is that it quickly goes to 3.3V on start up. When I put the Mac on...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    Yes, I did measure GP19 and GP27 (video): aren’t those the two pins which should be kept up by the resistors?
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    I just did a quick check: first, I monitored the voltage at the GP19 pin. The voltage raises very quickly to 3.3V as soon as the Mac is trying to access the disk during boot sequence. It stays at 3.3V sharp all the time. When I put the Mac on sleep, it drops to 0V almost instantaneously. On wake...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    Yes, correct. Data cable, tested working on other devices. Yes, out of the two I had (the plain Pico and the Pico W I successfully replaced like as soon as the Wi-Fi option became available), the plain one has the voltage regulator busted, the W one seems to output the correct voltage, but...
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    BlueSCSI on Macintosh Portable

    Good to know that. However, fact is that I could not program (not even mount) the Pico before desoldering it, cleaning the board, soldering it back, cleaning everything back again. By chance or not, it is now not missing a beat when I try to mount it on my Mac. Could have been something else...