Fixing a Macintosh Portable - What worked for me

David Cook

Tinkerer
Jul 20, 2023
165
214
43
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 transportation and use. The plastic is repairable, is not brittle like the Quadra 800/840AV series, and so this should be overlooked as a reason to avoid owning a Portable. Unless you run a museum, don't sweat a few repaired cracks and missing tabs. Happy little accidents.

2. The batteries are dead. These can be replaced by modern 3D printed cases and gel cells.

3. Capacitors have leaked. The capacitors are no worse than other Macs from the era and most can be recapped easily.

4. The memory cards are unavailable. Occasionally, modern reproductions are produced depending on NOS chip supply. Surprisingly, this is a significant limitation. Most vintage machines (except the IIfx and 4400) can easily have their memories maxed out. If you buy a Portable that turns out to be unrepairable, don't discard the memory card! On eBay, make sure there is a picture of the slots to ensure there is a memory card installed, otherwise you're stuck with only 1 MB, which isn't enough for System 7.

5. The power circuitry is seriously flawed. In hindsight, this is the biggest problem with the Portable. It doesn't work (and can be damaged) without a healthy battery installed, a higher-current AC adapter from a PowerBook fits perfectly and can kill the Portable, the 5120 has a hybrid module that decays and can die from capacitor juice (replacements readily available), and if you hook up your bench supply to only one of the two +V inputs you can kill a whole line of chips.

Based on the last reason, I recommend getting experience with repairing other Macs before you tackle a Portable.

MY ATTEMPTS

I purchased three 5120 and two 5126 portables over the years. They all needed plastic repairs (done), new batteries (done), recaps (done), 4 new hard drives (SD card emulators done), and the 5120s needed hybrid modules (done). The 5126s came with decent memory cards (done). One of the 5120s came with a 5 MB memory card that just needed Deoxit and reseating the chips/SIMMs (done).

The 5126 backlit Portables are working perfectly now, except one has a screen with a dead (always on) pixel. No worries.

All three 5120 boards were dead even after the recap and hybrid replacement. I suspect I am at fault for at least one of the failures. The biggest mistake when repairing these machines is providing power during testing to only one of the +V inputs. I assumed they were tied together on the PCB. I have since created an adapter cut from an old hard drive cable and the top and bottom pair crimped. I use 6.3V with a 1 amp limit on my bench supply (I don't repair with the hard drive installed).

Bench-power-supply.jpg


SCREEN

For bench testing, I used a proprietary VGA adapter created by @Androda and sold by Joe's computer museum:

Read the warnings on that page. ABSOLUTELY DO NOT CONNECT A VGA CABLE DIRECTLY TO THE BACK OF THE PORTABLE ITSELF. Also, while you're at Joe's computer museum, buy the BlueSCSI Portable Adapter and (if you own a 5120) a Hybrid module.

VGA-converter-for-bench-testing.jpg


The adapter rules out issues with the Portable LCD screen and it is easier to work with a freestanding modern display, rather than propping up the panel. If you see nothing coming out of the VGA adapter, it is possible that this portion of the Portable is damaged. In that case, try the Portable's LCD screen to be sure.


KEYBOARD

I plugged in the Portable's keyboard and mouse for my tests. Pressing a key on the keyboard powers up the Portable.


DRIVES

I used both a FloppyEMU and ZuluSCSI during bench testing. It's nice to have both in case either the SCSI or SWIM chip is blown. I first power up without either drive attached. There is no reason to risk damage to them until you validate that the motherboard can reach the flashing question mark.


SPEAKER

I like to have a speaker plugged in, just in case it gives me a sign of life.


FIRST BOARD (Impossible)

My first 5120 board has a dead power manager chip. The current draw is 33 mA. Pressing the keyboard shows no sign of life and the current draw doesn't change. In a healthy computer, the current draw is 10 mA, going to 300 mA and up when the space bar is pressed.

Without power, I checked the resistance of both the reset and interrupt buttons when pressed (<5 ohm)/released (> 10 kilohm) to make sure they weren't stuck. With power, I tried pressing and holding the pair of buttons to 'reboot' the power manager. Nothing.

I checked for broken traces and created a pinout diagram.

Power Manager pinout.jpg


Ultimately, I have thrown in the towel on this Portable. I swapped its best parts (a nice screen and some plastic elements) with one of the other Portables. I will keep the board for parts or in case someone comes up with the replacement power manager.

SECOND BOARD (Easy Peasy)

The second portable had two obvious issues that were easily fixed. The trace (right side of the image below) and the corroded leg on the 244 (left side of image). If you find any issues like this, look around to be sure you found them all. Also, resolder all the legs of nearby chips if any leg shows dullness or corrosion.

Sometimes-the-problems-are-obvious.jpg


THIRD BOARD (Complicated Success)

This last Portable motherboard did not make a startup sound and shows vertical pinstripes. However, it begins with a low current draw (10 mA) and wakes (~300 mA) when the keyboard is pressed. So, the power manager is working.

1768865112893.jpeg


The slots on the Portable have lots of valuable pins for testing. (Please note that the ROM and RAM slots are numbered from bottom to top on the motherboard but top to bottom on the schematic, whereas the PDS slot numbering matches the motherboard and schematic.)

Slots.jpg


Any pin with an asterisk '*' at the end of the name means it is activated when the signal goes low. For example, SYS_PWR* is 5V when the Portable is sleeping and 0V when the Portable is awake. Got it? Opposite day. SYS_PWR* = 0 = GOOD.

ROM_CS* 0V indicates the ROM is being accessed. ROM_CS*=0=GOOD.

BERR* 0V says a bad address was accessed. BERR*=0=BAD.

SYS_RST* 0V means the computer is halted waiting for power to stabilize or the computer will now restart. SYS_RST*=0 steady=BAD.

Get yourself some male-to-male jumper test leads and male-to-female jumper test leads for connecting an oscilloscope to the ports. I really like these:

In the image below, I am watching BERR* (bus error) and SYS_RST* (system reset).

The-ROM-RAM-and-PDS-slots-are-your-friends.jpg


On this board, I noticed that after power up, this computer would show bus error, then system reset (correct: it should reset after a bad address), followed by four ROM accesses, followed by quiet, and then repeat.

What's going on? Well, when the power manager tells the 68000 to proceed (SYS_RESET* 5V = GOOD, SYS_PWR* 0V = GOOD), the following happens:
1. The CPU sets the address lines to $00000000 to read the ROM.
2. The CPU GLU sees this and sets ROM_CS* (ROM chip select) to 0V. Remember, low signal is active on pins with an asterisk. ROM_CS*=0=GOOD
3. The ROM chips see the ROM_CS* signal on their pin 22. The LO ROM chip outputs 8 bits (D0-D7). The HI ROM chip outputs 8 bits (D8-D15). Why? This is 16-bits. Ever heard of a 16-bit data bus? That's what this is.
4. The CPU reads all 16 bits of data and sets the address to $00000002.
5. The CPU GLU disabled ROM_CS* (5V) when the CPU completed the read. But, it now sees the request for $00000002 and sets ROM_CS* to 0V again. ROM outputs.
6. The CPU reads those next 16 bits (32 so far) and stores that as the stack pointer. It then sets the address to $00000004.
7. CPU GLU, ROM supply the next 16 bits. CPU sets to address $00000006. CPU GLU etc ROM supply the next 16 bits.
8. The CPU jumps to the address specified in those most recent 32 bits.

To summarize, read the first 4 bytes of ROM (2 bytes at a time) for the stack pointer. Read the next 4 bytes of ROM (2 bytes at a time) for the address pointer.

ROM pinout.jpg


CPU GLU pinout.jpg


CPU pinout.jpg


The next step in a healthy Portable should be:
9. CPU sets the address to $0090002A because this was the most recent 32-bits sent from the ROM. If you disassemble the ROM (or a ROM file), you'll find these are the fourth through eighth bytes in the ROM.
10. A magical moment for the CPU GLU. It says "Wow! You found the final home for the ROM. I am remapping it to $009XXXXX from now on." Cool huh? ROM started at $000XXXXX at power up, but from now on will be $009XXXXX. The CPU GLU will also set the ROM_CS* active (0V) because it knows the CPU wants to read the next instruction from ROM at this new address.

On my Portable, however, ROM_CS* was not going low at this point. I got four good pulses (reads the first 8 bytes, 16 bits at a time) followed by this moment when ROM_CS* was not being activated by the CPU GLU. Why not?

Since the circuit was auto restarting over and over, I connected my oscilloscope to each data pin on the CPU and recorded the low/high pattern. In a spreadsheet, it looked like this:

Fnding-bad-data-lines.jpg


The third+fourth row should be $0090002A, but instead the data from the ROM reads $00800022. D4 is always low.

What is address $00800022 on the Portable? Nothing. Bus error! Reset! The CPU is doing its job -- it is just being told the wrong information.


SWIM DROWNING D4

I checked the traces with a multimeter. They're good. Is the ROM faulty? Possible but unlikely.

@techknight advises people to replace the SWIM on their Portable. Why? On a hunch, I snipped D4 on the SWIM.

Verifying-bad-SWIM-pin.jpg


Chime! Good ROM data.

The SWIM can fail passively (no response) or actively (interfering with other signals). My SWIM failed actively on pin D4. Yours may differ.

The Portable now got to here (see image below). We see a valid pattern on the screen. This is really good news. It means video works, the CPU works, the ROM works (this pattern was read from ROM), etc, etc etc. But, look closely and you'll notice this isn't the normal every-other-pixel pattern. This is the 'I'm testing memory or other stuff' diagonal pattern. No cursor and no disk icon.

Bad-SWIM-pattern.jpg


I removed the SWIM with hot air. Same diagonal patten. Some people think the Portable can boot with the SWIM removed. It cannot.

Underneath-SWIM.jpg


I substituted the SWIM from a dead PowerBook 170 and was greeted with:

It-is-alive.jpg


Success.

This particular board also needed a sound crash fix which I will describe some other time. But, hopefully this demonstrates the start up sequence and a technique that you can use to hunt down problems in your Portable.

- David
 

techknight

Moderator
Staff member
Dec 2, 2021
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North Carolina
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 transportation and use. The plastic is repairable, is not brittle like the Quadra 800/840AV series, and so this should be overlooked as a reason to avoid owning a Portable. Unless you run a museum, don't sweat a few repaired cracks and missing tabs. Happy little accidents.

2. The batteries are dead. These can be replaced by modern 3D printed cases and gel cells.

3. Capacitors have leaked. The capacitors are no worse than other Macs from the era and most can be recapped easily.

4. The memory cards are unavailable. Occasionally, modern reproductions are produced depending on NOS chip supply. Surprisingly, this is a significant limitation. Most vintage machines (except the IIfx and 4400) can easily have their memories maxed out. If you buy a Portable that turns out to be unrepairable, don't discard the memory card! On eBay, make sure there is a picture of the slots to ensure there is a memory card installed, otherwise you're stuck with only 1 MB, which isn't enough for System 7.

5. The power circuitry is seriously flawed. In hindsight, this is the biggest problem with the Portable. It doesn't work (and can be damaged) without a healthy battery installed, a higher-current AC adapter from a PowerBook fits perfectly and can kill the Portable, the 5120 has a hybrid module that decays and can die from capacitor juice (replacements readily available), and if you hook up your bench supply to only one of the two +V inputs you can kill a whole line of chips.

Based on the last reason, I recommend getting experience with repairing other Macs before you tackle a Portable.

MY ATTEMPTS

I purchased three 5120 and two 5126 portables over the years. They all needed plastic repairs (done), new batteries (done), recaps (done), 4 new hard drives (SD card emulators done), and the 5120s needed hybrid modules (done). The 5126s came with decent memory cards (done). One of the 5120s came with a 5 MB memory card that just needed Deoxit and reseating the chips/SIMMs (done).

The 5126 backlit Portables are working perfectly now, except one has a screen with a dead (always on) pixel. No worries.

All three 5120 boards were dead even after the recap and hybrid replacement. I suspect I am at fault for at least one of the failures. The biggest mistake when repairing these machines is providing power during testing to only one of the +V inputs. I assumed they were tied together on the PCB. I have since created an adapter cut from an old hard drive cable and the top and bottom pair crimped. I use 6.3V with a 1 amp limit on my bench supply (I don't repair with the hard drive installed).

View attachment 26210

SCREEN

For bench testing, I used a proprietary VGA adapter created by @Androda and sold by Joe's computer museum:

Read the warnings on that page. ABSOLUTELY DO NOT CONNECT A VGA CABLE DIRECTLY TO THE BACK OF THE PORTABLE ITSELF. Also, while you're at Joe's computer museum, buy the BlueSCSI Portable Adapter and (if you own a 5120) a Hybrid module.

View attachment 26212

The adapter rules out issues with the Portable LCD screen and it is easier to work with a freestanding modern display, rather than propping up the panel. If you see nothing coming out of the VGA adapter, it is possible that this portion of the Portable is damaged. In that case, try the Portable's LCD screen to be sure.


KEYBOARD

I plugged in the Portable's keyboard and mouse for my tests. Pressing a key on the keyboard powers up the Portable.


DRIVES

I used both a FloppyEMU and ZuluSCSI during bench testing. It's nice to have both in case either the SCSI or SWIM chip is blown. I first power up without either drive attached. There is no reason to risk damage to them until you validate that the motherboard can reach the flashing question mark.


SPEAKER

I like to have a speaker plugged in, just in case it gives me a sign of life.


FIRST BOARD (Impossible)

My first 5120 board has a dead power manager chip. The current draw is 33 mA. Pressing the keyboard shows no sign of life and the current draw doesn't change. In a healthy computer, the current draw is 10 mA, going to 300 mA and up when the space bar is pressed.

Without power, I checked the resistance of both the reset and interrupt buttons when pressed (<5 ohm)/released (> 10 kilohm) to make sure they weren't stuck. With power, I tried pressing and holding the pair of buttons to 'reboot' the power manager. Nothing.

I checked for broken traces and created a pinout diagram.

View attachment 26213

Ultimately, I have thrown in the towel on this Portable. I swapped its best parts (a nice screen and some plastic elements) with one of the other Portables. I will keep the board for parts or in case someone comes up with the replacement power manager.

SECOND BOARD (Easy Peasy)

The second portable had two obvious issues that were easily fixed. The trace (right side of the image below) and the corroded leg on the 244 (left side of image). If you find any issues like this, look around to be sure you found them all. Also, resolder all the legs of nearby chips if any leg shows dullness or corrosion.

View attachment 26214

THIRD BOARD (Complicated Success)

This last Portable motherboard did not make a startup sound and shows vertical pinstripes. However, it begins with a low current draw (10 mA) and wakes (~300 mA) when the keyboard is pressed. So, the power manager is working.

View attachment 26215

The slots on the Portable have lots of valuable pins for testing. (Please note that the ROM and RAM slots are numbered from bottom to top on the motherboard but top to bottom on the schematic, whereas the PDS slot numbering matches the motherboard and schematic.)

View attachment 26216

Any pin with an asterisk '*' at the end of the name means it is activated when the signal goes low. For example, SYS_PWR* is 5V when the Portable is sleeping and 0V when the Portable is awake. Got it? Opposite day. SYS_PWR* = 0 = GOOD.

ROM_CS* 0V indicates the ROM is being accessed. ROM_CS*=0=GOOD.

BERR* 0V says a bad address was accessed. BERR*=0=BAD.

SYS_RST* 0V means the computer is halted waiting for power to stabilize or the computer will now restart. SYS_RST*=0 steady=BAD.

Get yourself some male-to-male jumper test leads and male-to-female jumper test leads for connecting an oscilloscope to the ports. I really like these:

In the image below, I am watching BERR* (bus error) and SYS_RST* (system reset).

View attachment 26217

On this board, I noticed that after power up, this computer would show bus error, then system reset (correct: it should reset after a bad address), followed by four ROM accesses, followed by quiet, and then repeat.

What's going on? Well, when the power manager tells the 68000 to proceed (SYS_RESET* 5V = GOOD, SYS_PWR* 0V = GOOD), the following happens:
1. The CPU sets the address lines to $00000000 to read the ROM.
2. The CPU GLU sees this and sets ROM_CS* (ROM chip select) to 0V. Remember, low signal is active on pins with an asterisk. ROM_CS*=0=GOOD
3. The ROM chips see the ROM_CS* signal on their pin 22. The LO ROM chip outputs 8 bits (D0-D7). The HI ROM chip outputs 8 bits (D8-D15). Why? This is 16-bits. Ever heard of a 16-bit data bus? That's what this is.
4. The CPU reads all 16 bits of data and sets the address to $00000002.
5. The CPU GLU disabled ROM_CS* (5V) when the CPU completed the read. But, it now sees the request for $00000002 and sets ROM_CS* to 0V again. ROM outputs.
6. The CPU reads those next 16 bits (32 so far) and stores that as the stack pointer. It then sets the address to $00000004.
7. CPU GLU, ROM supply the next 16 bits. CPU sets to address $00000006. CPU GLU etc ROM supply the next 16 bits.
8. The CPU jumps to the address specified in those most recent 32 bits.

To summarize, read the first 4 bytes of ROM (2 bytes at a time) for the stack pointer. Read the next 4 bytes of ROM (2 bytes at a time) for the address pointer.

View attachment 26218

View attachment 26219

View attachment 26220

The next step in a healthy Portable should be:
9. CPU sets the address to $0090002A because this was the most recent 32-bits sent from the ROM. If you disassemble the ROM (or a ROM file), you'll find these are the fourth through eighth bytes in the ROM.
10. A magical moment for the CPU GLU. It says "Wow! You found the final home for the ROM. I am remapping it to $009XXXXX from now on." Cool huh? ROM started at $000XXXXX at power up, but from now on will be $009XXXXX. The CPU GLU will also set the ROM_CS* active (0V) because it knows the CPU wants to read the next instruction from ROM at this new address.

On my Portable, however, ROM_CS* was not going low at this point. I got four good pulses (reads the first 8 bytes, 16 bits at a time) followed by this moment when ROM_CS* was not being activated by the CPU GLU. Why not?

Since the circuit was auto restarting over and over, I connected my oscilloscope to each data pin on the CPU and recorded the low/high pattern. In a spreadsheet, it looked like this:

View attachment 26221

The third+fourth row should be $0090002A, but instead the data from the ROM reads $00800022. D4 is always low.

What is address $00800022 on the Portable? Nothing. Bus error! Reset! The CPU is doing its job -- it is just being told the wrong information.


SWIM DROWNING D4

I checked the traces with a multimeter. They're good. Is the ROM faulty? Possible but unlikely.

@techknight advises people to replace the SWIM on their Portable. Why? On a hunch, I snipped D4 on the SWIM.

View attachment 26222

Chime! Good ROM data.

The SWIM can fail passively (no response) or actively (interfering with other signals). My SWIM failed actively on pin D4. Yours may differ.

The Portable now got to here (see image below). We see a valid pattern on the screen. This is really good news. It means video works, the CPU works, the ROM works (this pattern was read from ROM), etc, etc etc. But, look closely and you'll notice this isn't the normal every-other-pixel pattern. This is the 'I'm testing memory or other stuff' diagonal pattern. No cursor and no disk icon.

View attachment 26223

I removed the SWIM with hot air. Same diagonal patten. Some people think the Portable can boot with the SWIM removed. It cannot.

View attachment 26224

I substituted the SWIM from a dead PowerBook 170 and was greeted with:

View attachment 26225

Success.

This particular board also needed a sound crash fix which I will describe some other time. But, hopefully this demonstrates the start up sequence and a technique that you can use to hunt down problems in your Portable.

- David

I have occasionally had to bypass the high-side load switch MOSFET for the sound circuitry because it gets noisy if not, 12V hovers around 4V and causes a lot of noise. They did away with this circuit in the backlit portable, so it is safe to do.
 
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David Cook

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I have occasionally had to bypass the high-side load switch MOSFET for the sound circuitry because it gets noisy if not, 12V hovers around 4V and causes a lot of noise. They did away with this circuit in the backlit portable, so it is safe to do.

I am so glad you said that, because that's what I had to do to get the Portable to not crash when playing sounds. I was embarrassed to post my 'hack' because I felt it wasn't a solution. But, given how many Portables you've worked on, and given that Apple disabled this in the backlit model, it appears to be a flaw in the design.

- David
 
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techknight

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It absolutely was a flaw, and what I find even more interesting is some portables do this, while others do not. I think its crap getting in the middle layers or whatnot. But thats just a wild hairbrained guess.
 
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JDW

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Fantastically detailed repair thread, @David Cook — thank you!

You said: "The biggest mistake when repairing these machines is providing power during testing to only one of the +V inputs."

QUESTION: Is your photo below showing us what we SHOULD do or should NOT do? (What my eyes see in that photo: (1) the same Ground entering the bottom two connector slots via the BLK & ORG wires, and (2) the same +6.3Vdc@1A (via benchtop PSU) entering the top two connector slots via the RED & BLK wires. Correct or Incorrect?)

1769564894522.png
 

David Cook

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I regret reusing an old hard drive cable for this photo -- as the color of the wires is confusing when used on a Portable. Give me a minute and I'll upload a better diagram.
 
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ClassicHasClass

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I have occasionally had to bypass the high-side load switch MOSFET for the sound circuitry because it gets noisy if not, 12V hovers around 4V and causes a lot of noise. They did away with this circuit in the backlit portable, so it is safe to do.
Specifically, what does this look like? I have a working prototype Portable with bad sound (caps were done), so I'm interested to hear if this might fix it.

I also have a dead Portable that didn't come back to life after a recap. I'm suspecting the hybrid but I could be wrong. It was probably used with a PowerBook adapter - has anyone tried repairing a Portable broken in that fashion?
 
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JDW

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I have a working prototype Portable with bad sound (caps were done)...
Bad sound like @David Cook and myself, actually. We both have 5126 machines which produce a "tick" sound every 10 seconds. I call that "bad sound." David explains the reason for the tick anomaly here:

Apple patched the sound watch code to keep sound power enabled with a check every 10 seconds. Unfortunately, even when sound power is already enabled, the code writes to the Power Manager, causing a pop. Quiet Portable replaces this code with an algorithm that turns power on only if it is off on a backlit Portable.

If you also have a pop/tick sound like that, the good news is that David programmed the cure here:

That Extension doesn't do anything to address my "noisy audio," but it does restore my sanity. That tick every 10 seconds was horrible. But the audio in general on my fully recapped and trace-repaired Portable 5126 is noisy from the speaker and from the headphone jack (I can endure it at volume level 3, but not level 7), so I too am interesting in hearing more details about the @techknight fix which involves bypassing "the high-side load switch MOSFET for the sound circuitry."
 

JDW

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Details of "bad audio" are important, so thank you for clarifying. But in my mind, bad audio is bad audio, and all bad audio needs to be addressed.

My Portable has no volume level issues. The loudness is about what I would expect, both from the speaker and headphone jack. It's never too soft to hear, for example. But the noise is loud enough to be noticeable even at Control Panel Sound Volume level 3.

Sadly, I didn't own a Portable in the late 80's or early 90's, so I have no idea how clean the audio was when the machines were new, either from the speaker or headphone jack. All I've done over the past couple years is question other Portable owners, but their replies vary. Some people don't notice any noise, so I suspect those people have good audio. And not every 5126 Portable owner reports the tick sound every 10 seconds either.
 

David Cook

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Here is a better look at the Portable battery input connector (J17) on the motherboard. Like other power connectors (such as on the Macintosh II, IIcx, or LC series), the ground inputs are actually connected together on the PCB itself. However, unlike other power connectors, the +V inputs are actually split up and go to different parts of the board.

J17 Input.jpg


BATTERY_TEST (poorly named) pin 3 of J17 is the main power source. It goes through fuse F1, meets up with the AC power adapter input, and supplies power to everything in the Portable.

BATTERY_SENSE pin 1 of J17 only goes to pin 25 of the hybrid module pin. (This information is for the 5120. I don't have a schematic for the 5126 and don't have mine disassembled to check.)

Because the battery connections are not tied together on the PCB, there is a danger when only one portion of the circuit receives power. Apparently, the hybrid module is unable to regulate power input when only the BATTERY_TEST terminal is connected, as the hybrid module sees 0V (or float really) on the BATTERY_SENSE pin.

So, you should always hard-wire your +V side of your harness together when using a bench power supply. Might as well do the same for GND. See below.

J17 recommendation.jpg


Isn't there a problem if Apple intended for the input to be split? Nope. On my Portables, Apple also wired the +V together before reaching the connector. See the purple circle on the bottom left of the image below. Apple has a switch that connects the output (to the PCB) to the big lead-acid battery when the plastic battery cover is in place, or the little 9V battery when the battery cover is removed. But, in either case, both wires leading to the PCB input J17 are crimped together.

Battery-harness.jpg


My harness is marked revision 9. Perhaps Apple originally had a different plan for the +V inputs?

600-0425 wiring harness rev.09.jpg


I do have a slightly radical suggestion. Perhaps we all should solder a jumper wire between J17 pins 1 and 3 when recapping our boards, just to avoid future problems where one connection becomes oxidized or loose.

Aside: @JDW would not be happy with the narrow gauge of the wire that provides power to the screen, hard drive, motherboard, memory, modem, etc. Yes, the little wire helps too, since it has been crimped together. But, this doesn't compare to the upgraded wiring harnesses JDW prefers for the SE/30. No accelerators for the Portable, I guess.
 
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