Macintosh IIvi Troubleshooting
This guide covers common faults with the Macintosh IIvi, including startup failures, video problems, and storage errors.
Preliminary Checks
Before detailed troubleshooting:
- Verify the power cable is secure
- Test with a known-good outlet
- Disconnect all external SCSI devices
- Remove any NuBus or PDS cards
- Check for visible capacitor leakage or battery corrosion
No Power
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Completely dead | Blown fuse, failed PSU, bad cord | Check outlet; test power cord; check PSU fuse |
| Clicking or ticking | Failed PSU capacitors | Recap power supply |
| Powers on briefly then dies | Overload protection, shorted component | Disconnect cards and drives; test with minimal config |
| Fan spins but no startup | Dead PRAM battery, failed logic board | Replace PRAM battery; check for capacitor damage |
Startup Failures
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| No chime, no video | Dead logic board, failed capacitors | Recap logic board; check PRAM battery |
| Chime but no video | VRAM issue, video connector | Reseat VRAM SIMMs; check video cable |
| Sad Mac error | Hardware failure | Decode error code; test RAM |
| Flashing question mark | No boot device | Check SCSI drive; verify termination |
| Chimes of death | RAM failure | Reseat or replace RAM SIMMs |
Sad Mac Error Codes
| Code Range | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 01XXXX | ROM test failure | Check for corrosion; may need logic board repair |
| 02XXXX – 05XXXX | RAM test failure | Try different SIMMs; clean SIMM slots |
| 0DXXXX | NuBus card failure | Remove all NuBus cards |
| 0EXXXX | SCSI controller failure | Check for capacitor damage |
| 0FXXXX | Data bus failure | Logic board damage |
See Sad Mac Error Codes for complete reference.
Video Problems
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| No video after chime | VRAM failure, cable issue | Reseat VRAM; check video cable and monitor |
| Distorted or garbled | VRAM configuration, bad VRAM | Ensure matching VRAM SIMMs; try removing VRAM upgrade |
| Wrong colors | VRAM issue, video DAC | Reseat VRAM; check for capacitor damage |
| Flickering | Loose cable, monitor issue | Check video cable; test with different monitor |
Audio Problems
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| No startup chime | Audio circuit failure, capacitor damage | Recap logic board |
| Distorted audio | Failed capacitors | Recap logic board |
| No audio through jack | Jack issue, cable | Test with different cable/speakers |
SCSI and Storage
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Flashing question mark | No bootable System | Check SCSI drive; verify cable; test with boot floppy |
| Drive not recognized | Wrong SCSI ID, termination | Verify unique SCSI IDs; check termination |
| System freezes during boot | SCSI bus conflict | Disconnect all SCSI; add one at a time |
| Floppy not reading | Dirty heads, failed drive | Clean heads; test with different disks |
SCSI Termination
- Internal drive should be terminated
- If using external devices, terminate only the last device
- Verify each device has a unique SCSI ID (0–6)
Capacitor-Related Failures
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Random crashes | Failed logic board caps | Full logic board recap |
| Audio distortion | Caps near audio circuit | Recap logic board |
| No startup | Power or reset circuit caps | Recap; check traces |
| Intermittent operation | Multiple failing caps | Full recap |
See Macintosh IIvi Capacitor Replacement Guide for procedures.
⚠️ PRAM battery — remove it now
The Macintosh IIvi carries a 3.6 V 1/2AA lithium PRAM battery. These leak and can burst, spraying corrosive electrolyte across the logic board and destroying nearby components — often while the machine simply sits in storage. Remove the PRAM battery from any un-serviced unit. If one has leaked, neutralise and clean the residue and repair corroded traces and vias before troubleshooting.[1]
⚠️ Surface-mount capacitor leakage
The Macintosh IIvi logic board uses surface-mount electrolytic capacitors that leak with age and corrode the board; recap and clean the logic board as a first step, then recap the power supply.[2]
Power supply
The desktop power supply uses electrolytic capacitors that fail with age. The classic symptoms are a machine that will rarely turn on, cannot be switched off without unplugging it, and clicks from the PSU when merely plugged in. Recap the power supply and confirm the +5 V and +12 V rails. (This PSU form factor is shared across the IIci, IIcx, IIvi, IIvx, Performa 600, Quadra 650 and Quadra 700.)[3]
References
- ↑ "Warning! Exploding Maxell PRAM Batteries", 68kMLA; and MacDat — Macintosh II family. Source for the leaking/exploding lithium PRAM battery that destroys nearby components.
- ↑ MacDat — Macintosh IIcx/II family; and 68kMLA recap threads. Source for the Mac II-family surface-mount electrolytic logic boards that leak and corrode with age and must be recapped.
- ↑ "Compact/Desktop Power Supply Capacitor Lists (by make and model)", 68kMLA; and "Capacitor Replacement in a Vintage Power Supply", Big Mess o' Wires. Source for the shared desktop PSU form factor (IIci/IIcx/IIvi/IIvx/Performa 600/Quadra 650/Quadra 700), the electrolytic failure symptoms and the PSU capacitor lists.