Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

Ih8reno

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Aug 10, 2012
1,383
206
Hi all

I picked up an se 30 today at a great deal. Took it home it booted then had some error and froze. Knowing the batteries in these old Macs lead I opened it up and removed what was the original battery and replaced the motherboard back in the machine. Now the Mac shows garbles images all over it and the hdd spins but the light indicator doesn’t come on. I checked and rechecked all the connections and it’s all good. Any ideas?
d4d25215b874f6b11660fae8856e709a.heic
e2b71740cd45f8e6b9cd69464ea9970e.heic
87ef0989a8644bbb3550c3323128a386.jpg
 

chabig

macrumors G4
Sep 6, 2002
11,259
8,955
Maybe it's just a loose connector. Start by reseating all of the cables you detached.
 

MacTech68

macrumors 68020
Mar 16, 2008
2,393
209
Australia, Perth
jerwin is correct.

You need to remove all the small, surface mount caps, clean the leaked electrolyte from the board, possibly repair etched/broken tracks and replace the caps with my personal preference of surface mount tantalum capacitors. Not an easy task at all. Surface mounted tantalum caps come in different sizes and only certain sizes will match the solder pads that are there. The electrolyte that leaks leaves what looks like a wetted area around them. This stuff corrodes the copper tracks (often leaving them a black color). It will do the same to tracks under ICS and IC legs.

Early in the failure of these caps, you can leave the machine running to warm it up and the caps will begin to work. A simple reset of the Mac (or power off then power on again) will usually get the machine to work, but if you leave it in this condition it will get worse as the tracks get eaten and the caps fail completely.

:(

SE30 MLB Caps.jpg
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.