The upside-down capacitor in mid-‘90s Macs, proven and documented by hobbyists

-



Brown notes that the predecessor Mac LC and LC II had the correct connections, as did the LC 475, which uses the same power supply scheme. This makes him “confident that Apple made a boo-boo on the LC III,” or “basically the hardware equivalent of a copy/paste error when you’re writing code.”

Making sure rehabbers don’t make the same mistake

Why was this not noticed earlier, other than a couple forum threads seen by dedicated board rehabbers? There are a few reasons. For one thing, the rail was only used for a serial port or certain expansion card needs, so a capacitor failure, or out-of-spec power output, may not have been noticed. The other bit is that the original capacitor was rated for 16V, so even with -5V across it, it might not have failed, at least while it was relatively fresh. And it would not have failed in quite so spectacular a fashion as to generate stories and myths.

As to whether Apple knew about this but decided against acting on a somewhat obscure fault, one that might never cause real problems? By all means, let us know if you worked at Apple during that time and can clue us in. Ars has emailed Apple with this tremendously relevant question, the day before Thanksgiving, and will update this post with any comment.

By posting his analysis, Brown hopes to provide anyone else re-capping one of these devices with a bright, reflective warning sign to ignore Apple’s markings and install C22 the electrically correct way. Brown, reached by email, said that he heard from another hobbyist that the reverse voltage “would explain why the replacement cap” they installed “blew up.” Some restoration types, like Retro Viator, noticed the problem and fixed it pre-detonation.

Modern rehabbers tend to use tantalum capacitors to replace the fluid-filled kind that probably damaged the board they’re working on. Tantalum tends to react more violently to too much or reverse voltage, Brown wrote me.

Should C22 or other faulty capacitors destroy your LC III board entirely, Brown notes that 68kMLA member max1zzz has made a reverse-engineered full logic board schematic.



Source link

Latest news

The Chemex Coffee Maker Isn’t Just Pretty, It’s Also Forgiving

Coffee is the original biohack and the nation’s most popular productivity tool. As we've battled the changeover to...

A New Study Details How Cats Almost Always Land on Their Feet

It's well established that when cats fall, they're able to land perfectly most of the time, nimbly maneuvering...

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Makes Me Wish All Phones Had a Privacy Screen

Even better, because it's integrated, you can customize when the Privacy Display turns on through the software. Mine...

You Can Approximate Pi by Dropping Needles on the Floor

Happy Pi Day! March 14 is the date that otherwise rational people celebrate this irrational number, because 3/14...

A Hacker Accidentally Broke Into the FBI’s Epstein Files

The United States and Israel’s war with Iran has now been ongoing for two weeks, and the bombs...

Do You Need an Identity Protection Service for Safe Browsing?

Odds are good you’ve encountered an identity theft protection service in the last year, even if you weren’t...

Must read

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you