Good afternoon! I purchased a Classic II a few weeks ago. I really enjoy the activity of restoring and future proofing old electronics. I've successfully restored and/or recapped an Amiga 600, a number of Atari and Commodore 8-bit micros, and a slew of video game consoles and handhelds including not one but two Vectrex. I'm not a total newb, but I'm not anything like an expert. I have an IT background but not electrical engineering - my knowledge is spotty. For example, I don't know how read a schematic and the best I can manage with my multimeter (with any confidence) is continuity testing.
With the fear of working around CRTs diminished from working on the Vectrex's, I thought I'd be ready for the challenge of the compact Mac.
When I received the system it powered on and worked immediately (it's the 4/80 model). On second restart, however, I got the messy checkerboard. Cracking the case, I saw that the caps on the logic board had leaked pretty badly sometime in the past. I did a thorough soft brush / IPA bath manually and the system powered up and worked great for days.
I ordered the recap kit for both the analog and logic boards from Console5 and an internal BlueSCIS drive. I also had a 60mm x 25mm Noctua fan from a previous project. All ready to future proof the machine, I started with the fan, which went fine. Next step: analog board recap.
I thought I did a nice clean job - but on first startup - POP - I blew C8. Some genius (I don't know who) managed to reverse the polarity on the thing. Ordered replacement cap and replaced the bad actor an hour ago.
Fingers crossed, I power the Classic II back on and... no pop, but the screen is all moving vertical bars and there's a nasty clicking noise. I powered it off immediately. Waited a few moments, powered back on - this time no display, but the clicking sound persists.
Aside from taking a perfectly good working Classic II into progressing levels of broken... I'm not sure what to do next. I checked all of the rest of the caps for reverses and found none. I've read that clicking is probably something power supply related, but that's pretty broad. I'm skeptical that this is just a dry solder joint, given all the change I introduced.
Any ideas?
With the fear of working around CRTs diminished from working on the Vectrex's, I thought I'd be ready for the challenge of the compact Mac.
When I received the system it powered on and worked immediately (it's the 4/80 model). On second restart, however, I got the messy checkerboard. Cracking the case, I saw that the caps on the logic board had leaked pretty badly sometime in the past. I did a thorough soft brush / IPA bath manually and the system powered up and worked great for days.
I ordered the recap kit for both the analog and logic boards from Console5 and an internal BlueSCIS drive. I also had a 60mm x 25mm Noctua fan from a previous project. All ready to future proof the machine, I started with the fan, which went fine. Next step: analog board recap.
I thought I did a nice clean job - but on first startup - POP - I blew C8. Some genius (I don't know who) managed to reverse the polarity on the thing. Ordered replacement cap and replaced the bad actor an hour ago.
Fingers crossed, I power the Classic II back on and... no pop, but the screen is all moving vertical bars and there's a nasty clicking noise. I powered it off immediately. Waited a few moments, powered back on - this time no display, but the clicking sound persists.
Aside from taking a perfectly good working Classic II into progressing levels of broken... I'm not sure what to do next. I checked all of the rest of the caps for reverses and found none. I've read that clicking is probably something power supply related, but that's pretty broad. I'm skeptical that this is just a dry solder joint, given all the change I introduced.
Any ideas?
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