A few of you here may be familiar with my cursed Quadra 840AV desktop. If not, this is a machine I purchased for $5 back in the mid 2000's at the Trenton Computer Festival here in New Jersey. Their flea market was 90% PC stuff, but the few people who had Apple stuff had excellent prices. A lot of the beige machines in the photo below were available for under $20-30.
My Quadra 840AV spent it's life being plugged into my TV (to use as a monitor, taking advantage of it's AV out). Even with a 40MHz 68k CPU it wasn't the best gaming machine, but I did have fun with what I could get working with it. I was quite proud of the $5 price tag, so I left that on there. Of course a few months later the machine sat unplugged. And almost a decade later I would find it in my parent's basement while helping them move. Around 2016 I started recapping my Macs, but I was very green and didn't have much of an idea of what I was doing.
I first attempted to recap my Macintosh IIcx, and although now it turned on and seemingly booted, the NuBus cards still didn't work properly... so I got no video out. Instead of giving up, I decided to double-down on the Quadra 840AV. The poor Quadra had stopped working and I thought I could simply recap it. I used through-hole capacitors (because that's all I had), and needless to say, it didn't fix anything.
I even put the poor thing through the dishwasher, hoping to clean it up... which likely did more harm than good! Again, I had no clue what I was doing. Since then it's been a regular machine on my live streams and has been through the ultrasonic cleaner so many times the poor AT&T chip has almost lost it's markings. Almost every time I bring out the board, I fix a trace or notice a wire that isn't connecting, etc.
So why am I posting about this? Well, because I'm stubborn and I want to fix it! I've spent countless hours (probably more like days at this point) probing and fussing with this logic board. What makes it difficult is the board is brown with dark brown traces, making it difficult (even sometimes with a microscope) to see what is going on.
So... where does this leave us now?
Currently when powered on the Quadra's power LED will turn on and the PSU's fan will spin... and that's it. No chime, no sound at all (even via using headphones). I've tried with and without RAM, VRAM, and a PRAM battery. I've also individually tested the 840AV's components in my Quadra 800. Thankfully the 840AV's 40MHz CPU and power supply function fine with the Quadra 800 logic board.
@Kai Robinson and @Branchus have been very helpful in giving me tips, comparing my board to theirs, and walking me through schematics and things to try. However, something is still wrong. There may be a short on the 5v rail or something that is not causing the shielding of the ports to actually make it to ground. Or maybe this board is just weird and that's how it is.
In my latest attempt I purchased a second-hand thermal camera for another project, but I was curious what was getting warm on the board. The CPU was getting hot enough to warrant installing the factory heatsink back on, so I wondered what else may be happening.
The hottest pieces on the board are the voltage regulators, at about 120° F (about 49° C). This is where the red marker is on the photo below. Although when measured with a multimeter, they seem to be doing their job, taking in 12v, and spitting out 5v.
However... something is painfully obvious. The RAM and VRAM (even with slots populated) stay ice cold. At least a few of the ROM chips look "on", and our multimeter probing proved them to be connected to where they needed to go.
Next Steps?
Since it's so easy to forget what has been tried, when, and how... I am writing this post to act as a log of what I've tried. Anyone is welcome to shout out suggestions of what to try, and I'll be posting more photos and close-ups of the board as I continue. But maybe... just maybe, one day... it'll live again. And at that point, I'd probably not even know what to do with it. And no, I won't be throwing it in the bin!
-Steve
My Quadra 840AV spent it's life being plugged into my TV (to use as a monitor, taking advantage of it's AV out). Even with a 40MHz 68k CPU it wasn't the best gaming machine, but I did have fun with what I could get working with it. I was quite proud of the $5 price tag, so I left that on there. Of course a few months later the machine sat unplugged. And almost a decade later I would find it in my parent's basement while helping them move. Around 2016 I started recapping my Macs, but I was very green and didn't have much of an idea of what I was doing.
I first attempted to recap my Macintosh IIcx, and although now it turned on and seemingly booted, the NuBus cards still didn't work properly... so I got no video out. Instead of giving up, I decided to double-down on the Quadra 840AV. The poor Quadra had stopped working and I thought I could simply recap it. I used through-hole capacitors (because that's all I had), and needless to say, it didn't fix anything.
I even put the poor thing through the dishwasher, hoping to clean it up... which likely did more harm than good! Again, I had no clue what I was doing. Since then it's been a regular machine on my live streams and has been through the ultrasonic cleaner so many times the poor AT&T chip has almost lost it's markings. Almost every time I bring out the board, I fix a trace or notice a wire that isn't connecting, etc.
So why am I posting about this? Well, because I'm stubborn and I want to fix it! I've spent countless hours (probably more like days at this point) probing and fussing with this logic board. What makes it difficult is the board is brown with dark brown traces, making it difficult (even sometimes with a microscope) to see what is going on.
So... where does this leave us now?
Currently when powered on the Quadra's power LED will turn on and the PSU's fan will spin... and that's it. No chime, no sound at all (even via using headphones). I've tried with and without RAM, VRAM, and a PRAM battery. I've also individually tested the 840AV's components in my Quadra 800. Thankfully the 840AV's 40MHz CPU and power supply function fine with the Quadra 800 logic board.
@Kai Robinson and @Branchus have been very helpful in giving me tips, comparing my board to theirs, and walking me through schematics and things to try. However, something is still wrong. There may be a short on the 5v rail or something that is not causing the shielding of the ports to actually make it to ground. Or maybe this board is just weird and that's how it is.
In my latest attempt I purchased a second-hand thermal camera for another project, but I was curious what was getting warm on the board. The CPU was getting hot enough to warrant installing the factory heatsink back on, so I wondered what else may be happening.
The hottest pieces on the board are the voltage regulators, at about 120° F (about 49° C). This is where the red marker is on the photo below. Although when measured with a multimeter, they seem to be doing their job, taking in 12v, and spitting out 5v.
However... something is painfully obvious. The RAM and VRAM (even with slots populated) stay ice cold. At least a few of the ROM chips look "on", and our multimeter probing proved them to be connected to where they needed to go.
Next Steps?
Since it's so easy to forget what has been tried, when, and how... I am writing this post to act as a log of what I've tried. Anyone is welcome to shout out suggestions of what to try, and I'll be posting more photos and close-ups of the board as I continue. But maybe... just maybe, one day... it'll live again. And at that point, I'd probably not even know what to do with it. And no, I won't be throwing it in the bin!
-Steve