About 10 years ago or more (I think) I bought a Macintosh Classic II off Ebay and it was mostly in storage (and not really working when I tried powering it on) until about 2 years ago when I pulled the logic board out with the intention of recapping the board (the case is in storage in another country). This weekend after finally all the bits I needed I embarked on recapping since it was starting to smell fishy. Recapping went pretty well except for ripping off the pad of one capacitor. There does appear to be some corrosion on the board but everything seems to be working barring audio output from the headphone jack (I'm not really sure if that's due to corrosion or something else. It just doesn't show up at all in Mac OS).
After the recap job I assembled everything to make myself a Macintosh Classic II in a box (for want of a better, catchier name). The components I used were:
For video out I've got it outputting to an old iPad 2 with a LCD encoder I got from Aliexpress. The 1024x768 resolution of the iPad 2 screen makes for an almost perfect 2x integer scale from the Macintosh Classic II's 512x384, so output looks super crisp.
Now that its mostly finished up I've got a couple of small tasks to wrap it all up:
After the recap job I assembled everything to make myself a Macintosh Classic II in a box (for want of a better, catchier name). The components I used were:
- RGBtoHDMI with TTL board from Meesse on Sellmyretro
- ATX4VC from dekuNukem on Tindie
- BMOW ADB-USB Wombat
- External 25-pin BlueSCSI v2 from Androda
- Hammond RM2095M Case
For video out I've got it outputting to an old iPad 2 with a LCD encoder I got from Aliexpress. The 1024x768 resolution of the iPad 2 screen makes for an almost perfect 2x integer scale from the Macintosh Classic II's 512x384, so output looks super crisp.
Now that its mostly finished up I've got a couple of small tasks to wrap it all up:
- The external sound output doesn't seem to work, need to figure out what's going on there
- Add an internal speaker (have one on order from MacEffects)
- Add a power LED to the front of the case
- Upgrade the RAM to the system's 10MB maximum
- 3D print a backplate that hasn't been hacked by my flush cutters
- Get some sort of logo and maybe Macintosh Classic II lettering on the front