Growing up in a college town, oddly there were few Macs in my circles. It was always Commodore, with the occasional Atari or Sinclair. I might not be starting at the very beginning, but I'm pretty happy to be starting at all.
It would have made a better story if I had taken more pictures, but yes they both work. The SE/30 (Doug) is essentially pristine inside, while the SE (Bob) has some battle scars. From what I can tell though, Bob was laying on his face for a very long time. When the battery spewed, it mostly landed on the chassis toward the front, but some dribbles also touched the SIMMs. Took them out, neutralized with vinegar and washed with alcohol. Reassembled and... nothing. So I took a chance with the Dremel and a wire-wheel brush and lightly scraped away more corrosion and reinstalled. Voila, life again! More work and preventative measures to come for sure, but for now both patients are stable.NICE, an SE/30 they are pretty popular. The plain SE looks like it should accept 1.44 disks. so thats handy.
cosmetically they seem ok. Have you tried turning them on?
The monkey has always been there, but like Toonces the cat sometimes it drivesVery nice starting point for the hobby. They look sweet indeed.
When were you planning to have the monkey fitted to your back?
It would have made a better story if I had taken more pictures, but yes they both work. The SE/30 (Doug) is essentially pristine inside, while the SE (Bob) has some battle scars. From what I can tell though, Bob was laying on his face for a very long time. When the battery spewed, it mostly landed on the chassis toward the front, but some dribbles also touched the SIMMs. Took them out, neutralized with vinegar and washed with alcohol. Reassembled and... nothing. So I took a chance with the Dremel and a wire-wheel brush and lightly scraped away more corrosion and reinstalled. Voila, life again! More work and preventative measures to come for sure, but for now both patients are stable.
I love it. Real cats here lending a hand too, Lemmy and Nico. Toonces was just that goofy driving cat skit from Saturday Night Live of years past.LOL! No monkey here, Ignatz runs loose in the lab and Crazy Cat on my shoulder dodges way too many bricks.
Keen eye! That's the underside edge of the ADB keyboard! (Correction... Apple Standard Keyboard. Still learning!)Oh, I have a question, @Bradsco. What is that on the side of the SE/30 out of the picture? Something else not worthy of a pampered and safe ride in your car buckled up?
Keen eye! That's the underside edge of the ADB keyboard! (Correction... Apple Standard Keyboard. Still learning!)
I was under the impression that ADB was part of the name at some point, but again just learning.Cool! I have one of those, too. Yeah, it is the ASK (Apple Standard Keyboard) without the function keys. ADB is Apple Desktop Bus, an Apple proprietary thingy for keyboards, mice, joysticks, and the like.
I was under the impression that ADB was part of the name at some point, but again just learning.
FWIW i will often say a `ADB Keyboard` in a generic way to say what connection the keyboard uses. (vs the phone jack thingie OG macs used or a PS2 keyboard.)
battery bumbed not worthstanding. I always thought a Mac SE would be a good starter mac to get into the hobby. Its pre a lot of the surface mount caps. So they don't usually cause an issue. and ADB keyboards and mice are easier to find then what a Plus or easier macs use.
The Mac SE/30(and later macs) on the other hand will surly need a recap. and that can be kinda hard entry point to get into the hobby.
IMHO
p.s. i'm still working up my skill set to be able to recap the later macs my self.
I think I can handle a recap. Really though I need to clean up this keyboard and mouse. They both work, but some keys are iffy.Yup. Any compact Mac will need recapping, regardless. There are new reloaded mobo options for the SE and SE/30 if the stock mobo was bombed due to battery or capacitor leakage or other reason and cannot be saved.