Macintosh SE Troubleshooting
Appearance
Begin troubleshooting by confirming the analog board provides correct voltages: ideally, +5V DC (within 4.90–5.10V) and +12V DC at the floppy or SCSI drive connectors.
If the SE appears completely dead (no fan, CRT glow, or startup chime):
- Check analog board fuses, rectifiers (CR2, CR3), Q2 transistor, and R22 resistor
- Test voltages with a multimeter
- Disconnect any peripherals or internal cards
- Inspect logic board for corrosion or capacitor leakage
- Ensure reset and interrupt switches are not jammed
- Perform full capacitor replacement (recap) on the logic board
"Simasimac" – Horizontal Stripe Pattern
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The infamous Simasimac pattern (horizontal B&W stripes, no chime) usually means failed reset circuitry or RAM issues caused by leaky capacitors.
Steps to resolve:
- Clean and reseat ROM and RAM chips
- Replace PRAM battery if below 3.0V
- Verify CPU reset and 16 MHz clock with an oscilloscope
- Check continuity around capacitors for damaged traces
- Inspect the Apple Sound Chip (ASC) and RP2 filter network
Chimes of Death and Sad Mac Codes
[edit | edit source]The Chimes of Death suggest serious logic board issues:
- Reseat and clean ROM SIMM and RAM modules
- Ensure memory banks are filled with identical SIMMs (4 per bank)
- Test RAM slots and address/data lines for continuity
- Replace faulty ICs like 74F258 multiplexers
- Severe cases may involve the VIA or ASC chips
See Sad Mac Error Codes for full interpretation of error patterns.
Video Display Issues
[edit | edit source]No Video but Chime Present
[edit | edit source]- Confirm CRT glow and brightness control
- Check for missing sync/video signals at P1 connector
- Suspect ICs like UE8 (video multiplexer)
Vertical "Jailbar" Stripes
[edit | edit source]- Caused by RAM misconfiguration
- Ensure matching SIMMs in each bank, larger ones in Bank A
Checkerboard Pattern
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- Indicates ROM or early memory failure
- Clean and reseat ROM SIMM
- Use compatible ROM for SE (not SE/30 or IIsi)
Disk Drive and SCSI Issues
[edit | edit source]Frozen Mouse on Gray Screen
[edit | edit source]- Suggests SCSI controller (NCR 53C80) failure
- Disconnect internal SCSI devices to test
- Replace SCSI chip if necessary
Floppy Drive Issues
[edit | edit source]- Clean mechanical components
- Check or replace the SWIM floppy controller
- Resolder or replace nearby ICs
More on this can be found at:
Audio and ADB Issues
[edit | edit source]Audio Issues
[edit | edit source]- No chime could mean bad ASC or analog amplifier
- Check headphone jack – if it works, analog board is likely at fault
- Replace ASC if digital audio fails
ADB Issues
[edit | edit source]- No keyboard/mouse? Check and replace:
* Fuse F1 * ADB microcontroller (Egret)
- Inspect solder joints on VIA chips and ADB port
Recurring Reset or Clock Failures
[edit | edit source]- Random resets = failing capacitors or shorted traces
- Clock loss = bad 32.768 kHz crystal or dead PRAM battery
- Clean up any electrolyte residue near ASC, VIA, or Egret chips
Analog Board Troubleshooting
[edit | edit source]- Vertical line only = horizontal deflection issue → reflow P1 pins, replace C15
- Horizontal line only = vertical collapse → check TDA1170A vertical IC
- Wavy display = failing flyback transformer
- Clicking power supply = logic board short or bad startup circuit (CR2/CR3, Q2, R22)