Macintosh LC II Troubleshooting: Difference between revisions

Create Macintosh LC II troubleshooting guide
 
Deep dive: SMD cap leakage signatures, PRAM battery, analog/sound specifics, chime/Sad Mac; cited
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Macintosh LC II (photo).jpg|thumb|right|300px|Macintosh LC II. Source: Wikimedia Commons.]]
This guide covers common issues and diagnostic procedures for the '''Macintosh LC II'''.
This guide covers common issues and diagnostic procedures for the '''Macintosh LC II'''.


Line 141: Line 142:
| Crackling or popping || Bad solder joints or capacitors || Reflow solder joints; replace capacitors
| Crackling or popping || Bad solder joints or capacitors || Reflow solder joints; replace capacitors
|}
|}
== ⚠️ PRAM battery — remove it now ==
The Macintosh LC II uses a 3.6&nbsp;V 1/2AA lithium PRAM battery (often a red Maxell). These are notorious for '''leaking and even exploding''', spraying corrosive electrolyte across the logic board &mdash; a battery can burst while the machine sits in storage and destroy the board. '''Remove the PRAM battery from any un-serviced unit immediately.''' If one has leaked, neutralise and clean the residue and check the traces and vias around the battery and the nearby chips for corrosion, repairing any that are damaged.<ref name="lc_batt">[https://68kmla.org/bb/threads/warning-exploding-maxell-pram-batteries.25169/ "Warning! Exploding Maxell PRAM Batteries"], 68kMLA; and [https://www.macdat.net/repair/kb/batteries_macintosh.html "Mac Battery Leaks"], MacDat. Source for the exploding/leaking Maxell PRAM battery and the resulting board damage, and the LC not booting without a battery.</ref>
The LC-series machines are also well known for '''not booting without a healthy PRAM battery'''. A dead or removed cell can leave the machine apparently dead or refusing to chime, so fit a fresh battery (or a modern coin-cell replacement) when testing.<ref name="lc_batt">[https://68kmla.org/bb/threads/warning-exploding-maxell-pram-batteries.25169/ "Warning! Exploding Maxell PRAM Batteries"], 68kMLA; and [https://www.macdat.net/repair/kb/batteries_macintosh.html "Mac Battery Leaks"], MacDat. Source for the exploding/leaking Maxell PRAM battery and the resulting board damage, and the LC not booting without a battery.</ref>
== ⚠️ Surface-mount capacitor leakage ==
The Macintosh LC II logic board uses surface-mount electrolytic capacitors that leak electrolyte from the bottom with age. The leakage corrodes traces and vias and is a leading cause of faults, so '''recap and clean the board''' as a first step. A common pattern is a board that '''chimes but shows no video''' after servicing &mdash; usually corrosion damage (broken traces or vias) around the leaked capacitors (for example near C136/C137), which must be traced and repaired.<ref name="lc_cap">[https://quagmirerepair.com/quadra605 "Quadra 605 / LC 475"], Quagmire Repair; the Apple Macintosh LC/LC&nbsp;II/LC&nbsp;III/LC&nbsp;475/Quadra&nbsp;605 Service Source; and [https://pappp.net/?p=1530 "Macintosh LC Recap"], PAPPP's Rambling. Source for the SMD-capacitor leakage, the PSU recap, and the trace/via damage causing chime-but-no-video.</ref>
== Power supply ==
The compact LC "pizza-box" power supply also uses electrolytics that leak with age. A '''dead LC PSU can usually be revived by replacing all its electrolytic capacitors''' and cleaning the leakage; any working LC PSU should be recapped pre-emptively, as it will otherwise fail. Confirm the +5&nbsp;V and +12&nbsp;V rails after servicing.<ref name="lc_cap">[https://quagmirerepair.com/quadra605 "Quadra 605 / LC 475"], Quagmire Repair; the Apple Macintosh LC/LC&nbsp;II/LC&nbsp;III/LC&nbsp;475/Quadra&nbsp;605 Service Source; and [https://pappp.net/?p=1530 "Macintosh LC Recap"], PAPPP's Rambling. Source for the SMD-capacitor leakage, the PSU recap, and the trace/via damage causing chime-but-no-video.</ref>
== References ==
<references />
== Component-level faults (deep dive) ==
=== Surface-mount capacitor leakage ===
The Macintosh LC II logic board uses surface-mount electrolytic capacitors whose electrolyte turns corrosive with age and creeps across the board, eating through traces, pads and IC pins. Typical signatures are a machine that will not chime, chimes but shows no video, plays distorted or missing audio, or shows a garbled or checkerboard screen. Wash the affected area and replace every electrolytic with a tantalum or polymer part, then repair any lifted traces. The switch-mode power supply (ASTEC or TDK on the LC-family machines) holds its own electrolytics and fails the same way, so recap it alongside the board.<ref name="caps">Mac84, [https://mac84.net/web/macintosh-lc-series-lc-lc-ii-lc-iii-power-supply-recapping-guide-astec-usa/ Macintosh LC series power-supply recapping guide]; the [http://www.maccaps.com/MacCaps/Capacitor_Reference/Capacitor_Reference.html MacCaps capacitor reference]; and iFixit. Source for surface-mount electrolytic leakage eating traces, pads and pins, the ASTEC/TDK LC power-supply cap failures, and Apple's use of tantalum (non-leaking) capacitors on the Quadra 700/900 logic boards.</ref>
=== PRAM battery ===
The Macintosh LC II backs up its clock and Parameter RAM from a 3.6&nbsp;V &frac12;AA lithium cell. These cells &mdash; red Maxell parts especially &mdash; leak or burst and corrode the board, so remove an aged one on sight. A flat cell can also stop a soft-power machine booting or disturb the video; left plugged in, trickle power preserves the settings, but a machine switched off at the wall with a dead cell loses them. Clean the area and fit a fresh 3.6&nbsp;V cell.<ref name="pram">[https://68kmla.org/bb/threads/warning-exploding-maxell-pram-batteries.25169/ Warning! Exploding Maxell PRAM batteries], 68kMLA; and [https://www.macdat.net/repair/kb/batteries_macintosh.html Mac Battery Leaks], MacDat. Source for the 3.6&nbsp;V &frac12;AA lithium PRAM cell, the Maxell leak/explosion board damage, and soft- versus hard-power PRAM retention.</ref>
=== Boot chime and Sad Mac ===
Read the start-up sound first: a normal chime with a black screen points to the display path or the monitor, an absent chime or a "chord of death" points to RAM or a core fault, and a Sad Mac shows a numeric code &mdash; see [[Sad Mac Error Codes]].


== Related Pages ==
== Related Pages ==