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PB1400 strange booting behavior on battery power
Posted by: mwudka on 2024-10-08 10:18:45
Hello!

I got a PB1400 at an e-waste dump that was in pretty good condition, though naturally the main and backup batteries were toast. I recelled the main battery, and it now holds a charge nicely. I also replaced the two backup batteries with a pair of Panasonic VL2330. I confirmed with a DMM that the backup battery reads ~3.2V between the white and black wires, and ~6.4V between the red and black wires. After putting everything back together, I reset the power manager and cleared the PRAM as the service manual describes. I also performed battery reconditioning, which took a bit over 2 hours. When I run off the AC adapter, everything works great. If I unplug the AC adapter, then things are still great: I can keep using the computer for a few hours, so the main battery seems good.

But other than that specific sequence, things pretty wonky. Some things I've noticed:
* If I shut down the computer, unplug the AC adapter, and then reconnect the AC adapter it appears my PRAM has been cleared: date/time are reset, and my brightness/contrast settings are reset
* When on battery power, I can't shut down the computer: it shuts down, but then I immediately get the startup chime, some sad speaker crackles, and then repeat
* If I shut down on AC power (which works fine) and then disconnect the AC adapter, pushing the on/off button does nothing

Any ideas on what's going on? My only idea is to re-disassemble everything and do more tests on the replacement battery, maybe trace the power further. I'm reluctant to jump straight for that, though, because it's a hassle and the case plastic does not feel durable. Since the machine is both usable and a delight, I'm not sure the risk is worth it.
Posted by: finkmac on 2024-10-08 10:20:24
probably a dead PRAM battery causing that
Posted by: LaPorta on 2024-10-08 10:30:46
I’d double-check the polarity and connections of your PRAM battery: I’d also test at the points it connects to on the board with it in-circuit to see if it reads the same.

Also, did you re-cap this thing? They are getting old.
Posted by: Daniël on 2024-10-08 10:35:28
probably a dead PRAM battery causing that

I imagine those Panasonic VL2330s OP rebuilt it with probably weren't dead 🙂

This isn't a dual PRAM battery one, is it?
A few of the 1400s had two PRAM battery packs for some reason, if there is another one in there that's dead, it might be throwing things out of whack, though I imagine you'd have found it if so.
Posted by: finkmac on 2024-10-08 11:15:10
I imagine those Panasonic VL2330s OP rebuilt it with probably weren't dead 🙂
they could be dead now depending on how the battery was assembled..
Posted by: 3lectr1cPPC on 2024-10-09 04:48:13
The not being able to cold start off the battery reads as a PRAM battery problem, not sure about the other two. I'd check your work there as others have said and then recap the logic board if all there looks fine.
Posted by: mwudka on 2024-10-09 12:23:55
Rats! I was hoping someone would say something like "Oh, you need to do XYZ after you change the PRAM battery. If I have to go back in anyway, it might be worth moving the battery into the HDD area, maybe with a little holder PCB, so that I don't have to go through this again. Does anyone happen to know the part number for the 3 pin connector?
Posted by: LaPorta on 2024-10-09 12:48:40
As fate would have it, I just rebuilt one of these last night. Make sure that your connections look the same as in my prior 1400 repair:

Post in thread 'PowerBook 1400 Restoration: Redux'
https://68kmla.org/bb/index.php?threads/powerbook-1400-restoration-redux.39657/post-428736
Posted by: mwudka on 2024-10-23 16:45:08
Posting the outcome for posterity: I rebuilt everything again, and confirmed that on the little ribbon connector I see ~6.4V. Alas, same behavior. So either I got very unlucky for the rebuild, or something is wrong further along (maybe the battery charging circuit, or the PRAM battery power supply). I don't think the plastic can survive another disassembly/reassembly, so I'm going to quit while I'm only somewhat behind. Thanks for the help, and thanks to LaPorta for the very helpful thread.
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