Atari 65xe emulator mac
I have checked very close up with a microscope. I mistakenly plugged into pin 1 and it got rather warm.Ĭlassic.jpg (449.03 KiB) Viewed 2800 timesĪnd you can see that there appears to be no corrosion visible around any of the chips. It has a 42 pin socket, and for 40 pin ROMs should be plugged in starting at pin 2. Replaced the leaking PSU capacitors on the analog board.Ĥ. Cleaned the area around the caps with IPA and thoroughly washed the mainboard in soapy water and dried for 48 Hours.ģ. (Note the picture of the mobo shows C5 and C9 missing, these were taken out to troubleshoot a non-existent short.Ģ. Removed the 7 capacitors that are known to leak on the logic board, and replaced with tantalum equivalents.
ATARI 65XE EMULATOR MAC SERIES
Removing the RAM daughterboard gives a different pattern on screen of close horizontal bars.Īside from joining 68kmla and watching the entire Mac Repair-a-thon series on Adrians Digital Basement, here's what I have done up to now:ġ.
![atari 65xe emulator mac atari 65xe emulator mac](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/b1/9c/09/b19c09749b06b17a672a14f54f155091.jpg)
It also has a wobble/ripple to it, but that does seem to stabilise after warming up a bit. The symptom is that when the machine is powered on, I get a checkerboard pattern on screen. Since its a retro machine and 68K based, I thought that I would pull it out of my more general blog and into one all of it's own, for hopefully better coverage and assistance. Up until around 6 months ago, it was running ok, but I recently powered on and it's not so well any more. The other machine I've owned for quite a while is a Mac Classic. A couple of Macbooks (G3 & G4), a couple of Performas (I still have one and it runs just fine) and a 17" Powerbook G4, which I bought for £40 as spares or repairs, and had it fixed and running OSX within a day of it arriving. I've been the owner of several Macs over the years.