Re: Micromac Speedy connections

2001-09-26 Thread epicenter

I don't seem to be having any luck with this. I can tie the wires around the pins 
under the oscillator on my Turbo 040-40 and it works fine, but when I do it on my 
IIsi, it won't boot, it just starts up, doesn't chime, and the screen takes on one 
solid color until I turn it off again. I soldered the wires to the bottom of the 
motherboard under the oscillator, but I had the same result. I pulled off the solder 
and it worked again, but no luck getting the Speedy to work! ...

Anyone know what I'm doing wrong?

Thanks.


-Original Message-
From: Jane Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2001 12:27:49 -0700
To:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Vintage Macs)
Subject: Re: Micromac Speedy connections


 Would this be a good application for Loctite, anyone?
 I was just reading about this in an article for repairing Duo keyboard leads.
 Jane
 
 Eric Wellington wrote:
 
  How do you think I should affix the wires to the oscillator solder pads on the 
bottom of the mobo? Scotch tape? Hot glue? I don't have access to a soldering iron, 
and I don't like soldering, either, it's too delicate a process.
 
 
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Re: Micromac Speedy connections

2001-09-25 Thread the pickle

At 22:00 +0800 on 25/09/01, Eric Wellington wrote:

I have a MicroMac speedy that I'm trying to use in a IIsi. Unfortunately,
after working with it for a little while, both clips fell apart, and one
just broke in half. I'm left with two wires coming from the Speedy card.
I've tried to connect these to the pins on the oscillator,
but unfortunately, what always seems to happen is either one wire grounds
to the oscillator casing, or the pins just don't touch the wires
properly. Can anyone suggest a better method for attaching these to the
motherboard? Would it be more effective for me to just hook these up to
the solder pads underneath the motherboard, under the oscillator

That would probably be best, yes.  You don't want to chance shorting out a
wire to the casing while the Mac is running.

p
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Re: Micromac Speedy connections

2001-09-25 Thread Jane Thompson

Would this be a good application for Loctite, anyone?
I was just reading about this in an article for repairing Duo keyboard leads.
Jane

Eric Wellington wrote:

 How do you think I should affix the wires to the oscillator solder pads on the 
bottom of the mobo? Scotch tape? Hot glue? I don't have access to a soldering iron, 
and I don't like soldering, either, it's too delicate a process.


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Re: Micromac Speedy connections

2001-09-25 Thread jpero

 Reply-to:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Vintage Macs)
 To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Vintage Macs)
 Date:  Tue, 25 Sep 2001 12:27:49 -0700
 From:  Jane Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject:   Re: Micromac Speedy connections

 Would this be a good application for Loctite, anyone?
 I was just reading about this in an article for repairing Duo keyboard leads.
 Jane
 
 Eric Wellington wrote:
 
  How do you think I should affix the wires to the oscillator solder pads on the 
bottom of the mobo? Scotch tape? Hot glue? I don't have access to a soldering iron, 
and I don't like soldering, either 
 

No and no both of yours.

Soldering or clip on types are only way to do this properly.

Cheers,

Wizard

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Re: Micromac Speedy connections

2001-09-25 Thread Jane Thompson



Eric Wellington wrote:

 Unfortunately I do not want to invest that much time in the project. I plan to just 
get started on it right away. I've done some soldering, but only wires, not printed 
boards. I feel confident though that I can get it right first try, all I have to do 
is put down a little liquid solder onto the area where the wire touches the pad.

Printed boards aren't much more complicated than just wires. One tip that will prevent 
you from having a cold solder joint, and therefore a bad connection, though, is to 
have all three elements in contact with the tip of the iron so that they are all a 
similar temperature. It's a quick operation, because the tracks or pads of the
board will lift with too much heat. About a second is sufficient. Your joint should be 
shiny when done, and less is more.
Good luck with it.
jt


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MicroMac Speedy

2001-09-10 Thread JakeCatfox

Does anyone know where I can find a MicroMac speedy? MicroMac wants $50 for one, but 
that's absurd! I can get an ACCELERATOR that will yield better beformance for that 
price. I reason I want one is that I want to try overclocking the 040 on my Turbo 040 
card from 40mhz to 48mhz or higher. Does anyone know if this works? I read attempts 
to ground pin one and feed in a new signal failed in overclocking the Turbo 
i040-33mhz board, but this didn't use a Speedy.

Thanks a lot,
Deven Overclock the toaster! Gallo

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Re: MicroMac Speedy

2001-09-10 Thread Marten van de Kraats

Does anyone know where I can find a MicroMac speedy? MicroMac wants $50
for one, but that's absurd! I can get an ACCELERATOR that will yield
better beformance for that price. I reason I want one is that I want to
try overclocking the 040 on my Turbo 040 card from 40mhz to 48mhz or
higher. Does anyone know if this works? I read attempts to ground pin one
and feed in a new signal failed in overclocking the Turbo i040-33mhz
board, but this didn't use a Speedy.


you can get a powermac for that price. Why bother then?

Marten


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Re: MicroMac Speedy

2001-09-10 Thread Gene Osburn

 Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 09:34:27 EDT
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: MicroMac Speedy
 
Does anyone know where I can find a MicroMac speedy? MicroMac wants $50
for one, but that's absurd! I can get an ACCELERATOR that will yield
better beformance for that price. I reason I want one is that I want to
try overclocking the 040 on my Turbo 040 card from 40mhz to 48mhz or
higher. Does anyone know if this works? I read attempts to ground pin
one and feed in a new signal failed in overclocking the Turbo
i040-33mhz board, but this didn't use a Speedy.

I had to lurk on ebay for quite a while to find one.  Luckily, I wound
up with the complete package in original box.  The Speedy attaches to
the CPU oscillator on the mobo, so I don't see how you could use it to
accelerate the 040 card itself...?

BTW, it easily ran my IIsi at 30 MHz+ (31.5 or 32.5 top speed, can't
remember which), but I didn't try using the serial ports.  Does anyone
here have any direct experience (no hearsay, please) successfully using
serial ports on accelerated IIsi...?

-- 
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Friends don't let friends do Windows

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Re: MicroMac Speedy

2001-09-10 Thread the pickle

At 09:34 -0400 on 10/09/01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Does anyone know where I can find a MicroMac speedy? MicroMac wants $50
for one, but that's absurd! I can get an ACCELERATOR that will yield
better beformance for that price. I reason I want one is that I want to
try overclocking the 040 on my Turbo 040 card from 40mhz to 48mhz or
higher. Does anyone know if this works? I read attempts to ground pin
one and feed in a new signal failed in overclocking the Turbo
i040-33mhz board, but this didn't use a Speedy.

1) the Turbo i040 is an LC, not a full 040.
2) Disabling the crystal and feeding in a new signal is NOT the most
reliable way to overclock.  If you're gonna do it, just stick a new crystal
in place of the old one.

p
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Re: MicroMac Speedy

2001-09-10 Thread the pickle

At 11:07 -0700 on 10/09/01, Gene Osburn wrote:

I had to lurk on ebay for quite a while to find one.  Luckily, I wound
up with the complete package in original box.  The Speedy attaches to
the CPU oscillator on the mobo, so I don't see how you could use it to
accelerate the 040 card itself...?

The 040 card has its own crystal oscillator onboard.

p
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