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  3. Today on the bench is the PowerBook 2300c.

Today on the bench is the PowerBook 2300c.

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  • paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
    paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
    paulrickards@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Today on the bench is the PowerBook 2300c. When I got it last year, the display had problems: two large vertical stripes were glitching.

    I opened it and used alcohol swabs on the display columns which may have had cap fluid leaking onto them. The visible caps were on separate boards.

    I suspected that there's caps on the other side but I was terrified to take that board out for fear of breaking the tiny flat ribbon connectors on those columns.

    #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

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    • paulrickards@mastodon.socialP paulrickards@mastodon.social

      Today on the bench is the PowerBook 2300c. When I got it last year, the display had problems: two large vertical stripes were glitching.

      I opened it and used alcohol swabs on the display columns which may have had cap fluid leaking onto them. The visible caps were on separate boards.

      I suspected that there's caps on the other side but I was terrified to take that board out for fear of breaking the tiny flat ribbon connectors on those columns.

      #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

      Link Preview ImageLink Preview Image
      paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
      paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
      paulrickards@mastodon.social
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      One year later, the PowerBook 2300c display has exactly the same problem in the same area. So I tore it down again and swabbed all of the column pads on the LCD again, but maybe not as thoroughly as I did previously. Much to my surprise, it looks ok again.

      The display is a Toshiba LTM09C035L.

      So, the question is: was this leaking capacitor related or maybe a janky LCD flat cable?

      #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

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      paulrickards@mastodon.socialP 1 Reply Last reply
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      • paulrickards@mastodon.socialP paulrickards@mastodon.social

        One year later, the PowerBook 2300c display has exactly the same problem in the same area. So I tore it down again and swabbed all of the column pads on the LCD again, but maybe not as thoroughly as I did previously. Much to my surprise, it looks ok again.

        The display is a Toshiba LTM09C035L.

        So, the question is: was this leaking capacitor related or maybe a janky LCD flat cable?

        #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

        Link Preview ImageLink Preview Image
        paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
        paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
        paulrickards@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        My current theory is capacitor problems affecting two specific connection areas determined by this diagram of the LCD flipping the display to match the rear.

        But I reaaaallly don't want to break this LCD by trying to lift this board away and having those thin flex cables

        #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

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        • paulrickards@mastodon.socialP paulrickards@mastodon.social

          My current theory is capacitor problems affecting two specific connection areas determined by this diagram of the LCD flipping the display to match the rear.

          But I reaaaallly don't want to break this LCD by trying to lift this board away and having those thin flex cables

          #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

          Link Preview Image
          paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
          paulrickards@mastodon.socialP This user is from outside of this forum
          paulrickards@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          Also related: anyone have an internal SCSI drive flat cable from the inside of a PowerBook Duo 230 or perhaps a dead Duo 230? I'd love to convert this to a BlueSCSI and get WiFi (the current drive and cable inside is IDE).

          #RetroComputing #VintageApple #VintageMac

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