Recently I picked up a PowerBook 100 for cheap because it lacked the CPU card. Fortune favored me in that the CPU card was available from a seller in Tunisia and not labeled for the 100 - they had it listed by part number.
Starting up the old machine resulted in the sad mac code:
0000000E
0000FF00
Sad mac code reference for the mac portable (since the 100 is basically just a mini portable): http://myoldmac.net/FAQ/SADerror-portable.htm
This means that the sad mac code is for a data bus failure, for data bus bits 8 through 15. I traced out the CPU card for awhile trying to find broken data lines, but all of them had a good connection to the plug (CPU card is socketed).
More tracing around revealed that the VCC pin on one of the PSRAM chips had a marginal connection. Light touch with the multimeter probe, no connectivity. Push even slightly harder, and it suddenly is ok.
Thus, I hot-aired all the PSRAM chips off the board and cleaned it all up (which was good, there was brown stuff underneath of unknown origin). After re-soldering the chips in place, my 100 no longer does the chimes of death and shows the floppy disk with question mark. Haven't tried booting yet, though I expect it's likely to work.
If your PowerBook 100 has even the slightest capacitor leakage from that one electrolytic on the CPU card, I suggest removing and cleaning all the PSRAM connections just to be sure.
edit: Yes, I also replaced all the other electrolytic capacitors.
Starting up the old machine resulted in the sad mac code:
0000000E
0000FF00
Sad mac code reference for the mac portable (since the 100 is basically just a mini portable): http://myoldmac.net/FAQ/SADerror-portable.htm
This means that the sad mac code is for a data bus failure, for data bus bits 8 through 15. I traced out the CPU card for awhile trying to find broken data lines, but all of them had a good connection to the plug (CPU card is socketed).
More tracing around revealed that the VCC pin on one of the PSRAM chips had a marginal connection. Light touch with the multimeter probe, no connectivity. Push even slightly harder, and it suddenly is ok.
Thus, I hot-aired all the PSRAM chips off the board and cleaned it all up (which was good, there was brown stuff underneath of unknown origin). After re-soldering the chips in place, my 100 no longer does the chimes of death and shows the floppy disk with question mark. Haven't tried booting yet, though I expect it's likely to work.
If your PowerBook 100 has even the slightest capacitor leakage from that one electrolytic on the CPU card, I suggest removing and cleaning all the PSRAM connections just to be sure.
edit: Yes, I also replaced all the other electrolytic capacitors.