Subject: Re: Er, does "correctable frying" of Apple IIs exist? Path: lobby!newstf02.news.aol.com!portc01.blue.aol.com!cyclone2.usenetserver.com!news-out.usenetserver.com!cyclone1.usenetserver.com!news.washington1.Level3.net!news.denver1.Level3.net!Level3.net!not-for-mail Date: Mon, 31 Jul 2000 22:35:55 -0800 From: processoroverclocked@33mhz.cjb.net (Jon Bettencourt) Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 Message-ID: References: <01bffb77$4362ed60$a85e78c7@colossus> Organization: Kreative Entertainment Services X-Newsreader: Newswatcher 2.2.2 (Just recently damaged it's own preferences file! Eeeeergh!! It makes me soooo mad!!!) Lines: 35 NNTP-Posting-Host: cyberia.interx.net X-Trace: news.denver1.Level3.net 965107888 19975 209.0.37.14 In article <01bffb77$4362ed60$a85e78c7@colossus>, "Neil Thayer" wrote: > Perhaps eight years ago, at what will show itself to be the dumbstoopid age > of 11, I had my dad obtain (for free!) a mint condition '78 Apple II from a > friend of his. At the time, I had only a hazy idea of its historical > significance and collector's value. I asked him to get it mainly so I > could play some really old Apple versions of Atari games (Burger Time, > Centipede, etc.). So one day I'm fooling around with the hardware inside, > right, and I remove and reinsert the disk controller card while the unit's > on. (Yes, I know, the most idiotic thing possible, but I was 11.) The > unit hasn't worked correctly since. Sometimes when it boots up it won't > automatically access the floppy drive (and yes, it did before, I had the > ROM upgrade); sometimes the keyboard characters don't correspond to the > keys. Is there anything obvious that might have been fried and could be > corrected? Not a day goes by that I don't curse myself for ruining an > absolutely mint original Apple II (and a FREE one at that!) all those years > ago, and I figure I owe it to myself to at least try and fix the thing. > Any ideas? Any? :-( Try replacing the drive controller card (there are probably hundreds on eBay right now). Try replacing the AY-9600-Pro (or whatever it is) keyboard encoder, if it has one. Try replacing all the common logic gate chips. Most of the parts in an Apple II are off-the-shelf parts (the original II/II+ especially), so it should be easy to find replacements. I remember someone saying that the most advanced chip in an Apple II was the 6502 processor and the dynamic RAM, and the other parts were just off-the-shelf. -- Tammy and TIA ----> Jon. = dimension18.cjb.net === ICQ# 76731065 === jonrelay@napanet.net = In the words of Olivia: Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!