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| Replacement Power Supply in Quadra 605 |
the power supply in my souped up Quadra 605 died, and i am too lazy to recap it.
(Q605 is recapped with tantalum, HD replaced with SD card, pretty new VRAM, 128MB RAM, and a full 68040)
Following knowledge from a thread on TinkerDifferent I searched out a MeanWell RPT-60A, a small power supply that provided 12V, 5V, -5V and two GND, a perfect replacement.
I pulled the pin headers off to attach the Quadra Power Connector directly; no actual reason, i just though it looked clean and was quick work.
I printed a small 3D bracket to keep the smaller PSU in place inside the original housing, and restored everything into the case.
It powers up and boots fine. I will do an uptime check later.
(please point out anything i have missed, but it seems to work fine; Just posting here for other folks to reference.)
Posted by: AEChadwick on 2022-08-11 08:32:55 |
I pulled the pin headers off to attach the Quadra Power Connector directly; no actual reason, i just though it looked clean and was quick work.
Yeah, that looks like a very neat end result. Nicely done.
Posted by: cheesestraws on 2022-08-11 08:35:11 |
Lovely 605. Nice work.
Posted by: joshc on 2022-08-11 08:39:47 |
shoulders of giants, my friends; everything i do i learned from reading, mostly in these forums.
Posted by: AEChadwick on 2022-08-11 19:05:29 |
That’s really a nice result!
Posted by: MrFahrenheit on 2022-08-11 19:50:34 |
Very nice
Posted by: djhaloeight on 2022-08-11 21:17:52 |
Excellent timing, I need to rebuild at least one TDK power supply.
Is there anything under the new power supply to protect it from shorting against the metal of the casing? It looks like it's just hanging in space based on the picture.
Posted by: SpocksBeer on 2022-08-18 03:39:31 |
Is there anything under the new power supply to protect it from shorting against the metal of the casing? It looks like it's just hanging in space based on the picture.
I assume that's what the orange thing in the second picture is? A plastic standoff/bracket to adapt the screw holes and space the PSU away from the metal.
@AEChadwick - could you upload the files for that bracket? I will at some point need to do one or two of these, and having a file for the bracket would make life significantly easier.
Posted by: cheesestraws on 2022-08-18 05:27:17 |
Also, where did you source your heatsink w/fan and the replacement fan for your 605?
Posted by: joshc on 2022-08-18 05:45:27 |
Is there anything under the new power supply to protect it from shorting against the metal of the casing? It looks like it's just hanging in space based on the picture. the existing PSU has a thin plastic membrane underneath the original PCB; the little orange bracket keeps the RPT-60A on the plastic (strangely it was only under that half of the original PCB). In the Tinkerdifferent thread, one guy printed an entire drop-in replacement to hold the new board; i wanted to keep the original metal box, not least of all to re-use the switched power plug.
could you upload the files for that bracket? the STL is in the first post, it's the zipped file at the end. It's super basic, really just gets the holes in the right places--please remix and share.
Posted by: AEChadwick on 2022-08-18 06:22:03 |
the STL is in the first post, it's the zipped file at the end. It's super basic, really just gets the holes in the right places--please remix and share.
Well, I was obviously paying attention. 😀 thanks!
Posted by: cheesestraws on 2022-08-18 06:45:39 |
Well, I was obviously paying attention. 😀 thanks! no worries dude, the amount of projects you have going at any one time? i just assume it’s like a happy ball of ferrets inside your brain!
Posted by: AEChadwick on 2022-08-18 06:52:58 |
Also, where did you source your heatsink w/fan and the replacement fan for your 605? heat sink fan from amazon, it’s fine. (i printed little "clips" to catch the screws & pressure-fit alongside the processor, but i didn't keep that file...)
for the case i wanted a Noctua, but i could not find anything in 60x60x15... so i got a side-blower. it’s a little noisy, i want something nicer.
Delta BFB0612HB 6015 60x60x15mm Square Blower Fan 12 V 0.32
www.ebay.com
Posted by: AEChadwick on 2022-08-18 07:20:16 |
heat sink fan from amazon, it’s fine. (i printed little "clips" to catch the screws & pressure-fit alongside the processor, but i didn't keep that file...)
for the case i wanted a Noctua, but i could not find anything in 60x60x15... so i got a side-blower. it’s a little noisy, i want something nicer.
Delta BFB0612HB 6015 60x60x15mm Square Blower Fan 12 V 0.32
www.ebay.com
I use a silenx 60mm in mine which fit in place of the original fan.
Posted by: joshc on 2022-08-18 07:29:16 |
Has anyone done something likes this with a iisi?
Posted by: jajan547 on 2022-08-20 13:46:13 |
Has anyone done something likes this with a iisi?
funny you should mention... that someone is @MrGasS27
(my IIsi PSU was recapped and is mostly working fine, so i have not undertaken the ATX mod yet.)
Posted by: AEChadwick on 2022-08-20 15:00:32 |
funny you should mention... that someone is @MrGasS27
(my IIsi PSU was recapped and is mostly working fine, so i have not undertaken the ATX mod yet.) Lovely IIsi there - Carrera 040 yes!
Posted by: joshc on 2022-08-22 23:27:01 |
My first post, hopefully I didn't break too many rules.
This was a post I needed to see a year ago when my LC475 power supply died. I am usually pretty lazy as well (and terrible at soldering) but I did order the caps and replaced them all. Fortunately I seemed to have done it correctly as my machine powered back on. Mine is fairly similar to yours but not quite as pimped. I have the full 68040 in but have not swapped the resisters to get it running at 33Mhz (too nervous). Only 36 megs of RAM. Maxed out the video memory. SCSI2SD v6 and ethernet card installed.
Things I don't have are the replacement fan, my stock fan is loud so I like the suggestions here. I also don't have a fan on my processor, do you find this helps prevent lock-ups? I don't leave my LC475 running. Only on when I am playing classic games or feel like browsing MacintoshGarden using Classilla with a WiFi bridge plugged into my ethernet (amuses me being online with this machine).
Posted by: Sinjinhawke on 2022-11-07 14:49:16 |
My first post, hopefully I didn't break too many rules.
This was a post I needed to see a year ago when my LC475 power supply died. I am usually pretty lazy as well (and terrible at soldering) but I did order the caps and replaced them all. Fortunately I seemed to have done it correctly as my machine powered back on. Mine is fairly similar to yours but not quite as pimped. I have the full 68040 in but have not swapped the resisters to get it running at 33Mhz (too nervous). Only 36 megs of RAM. Maxed out the video memory. SCSI2SD v6 and ethernet card installed.
Things I don't have are the replacement fan, my stock fan is loud so I like the suggestions here. I also don't have a fan on my processor, do you find this helps prevent lock-ups? I don't leave my LC475 running. Only on when I am playing classic games or feel like browsing MacintoshGarden using Classilla with a WiFi bridge plugged into my ethernet (amuses me being online with this machine). Before you replace the loud fan, just try lifting the sticker in the centre of the fan and putting two or three small drops of sewing machine oil in the bearings, and running the fan upside-down for a couple of minutes in its normal location, then switch it back the right way up. I used a silicone based oil.
Made my fan run way quieter by getting lubrication back in the bearing. No harm in trying before you replace it.
Edit : Oh, also clean the blades if they have grime on them. Dirt/dust unbalances a fan.
Posted by: Phipli on 2022-11-07 15:00:40 |
Interesting. Not sure why doing something like that did not occur to me. Always to eager to replace older components it seems.
Thank you.
Posted by: Sinjinhawke on 2022-11-07 15:12:13 |