I almost bought one - an Office Max had a display model for $400, floppy drive only. I first went to pick up my check from work, and when I got there I found that I was the winner of a contest; the prize was a PowerBook 160, worth $2500. I still have that laptop.
Nice... I don't think these are boring at all. I remember pining over one when I was a 4th grader and trying to get my dad to buy me one. Compared to my CoCo2 and my Amstrad PC1512, it looked impressive to me! Now out of my collection of vintage all-in-ones, the Classic is the only one I have left to have recapped ;)
Say what you want but my father's been pulling off CRT anode caps with no discharging for the last 30 years and never got shocked. And if you do get shocked, it's not as deadly as people say it is.
@@masterkamen371 terrible advice. it's not deadly, until it is. even minor electric shocks can stop your heart! then yer dead, unless you live in a hospital bed...then you still wouldn't have great chances!
So many memories of the Mac Classic and Classic II. My High School and Middle School were full of them. They were usually setup for word-processing, and connected via Local Talk to a Laser Printer, using the PhoneNet adapters, and with a few setups, even connected to the wider network for file sharing and access to First Class Client email. I also recall using one in the 3rd Grade (1991-92), to create a Hypercard stack that controlled a LaserDisc Player, to display video and images about Japan for a class presentation.
My first paying job as a software developer was for the Mac Plus - I worked in a tech startup along side EEs - these guys would let me borrow their logic analyzer to debug thorny memory corruption bugs. This meant popping off the case to put a connector onto the Mac's 68000 CPU. Which means, of course, the high voltage CRT was exposed. Naturally everyone knew better than to go fiddling around back there. That would never fly these days, of course. But what can I say - those were primitive times when we still used bear skins and stone knives.
Children back then were taught right about computers. Even an Apple ][ had utility. Now, today’s youth are ingrates and use smartphones and AI and laugh at the past. Sad!
I remember the apple mac computers would make the quack quack sound whenever you clicked on something lol. Your youtube channel and tech moan are my go to youtube channels that I go to for vintage gear and vintage products since I'm subscribed to you and tech moan youtube.
11:45 You need a set of TV adjustment plastic screwdrivers, partly for safety but also because if you ever adjust CRT potentiometers the plastic is non-ferrous and won't interfere with the picture so your adjustments are accurate.
I bought one of these new. My first new Mac bought. Got it cheaper as was going to college. Loved it had it a few years. Never had a problem with it. Thx for the memories!
This is one of the rare Mac Classic commentaries that actually puts this system into the correct and appropriate historical and economic context, and treats the machine with the respect it actually deserves. Those who decry this model in this day and age would do well to remember that thought: A computer with limited performance is better than no computer at all. Sales figures for the Classic prove that many people understood that in its day, even if it gets forgotten now.
But this rubbish cost like $1500 new, double that in today's value. That's about double the price of a rubbish 386SX at the time, which gave you a few times the performance and would have come with a VGA card. 256 colours is a lot more than one. Or worse yet, you could purchase an Amiga for $600 or probably a lot less by that time and run a System 7 virtual machine at the full speed of that Classic.
@masterkamen371 A not untypical reworking of the facts, ignoring as it does what PC/Windows systems typically were at that time, plus the niche market Apple were selling into. What it cost 'in today's value' is irrelevant, and what it cost then brought the price of a Mac into practical range for those who wanted a Mac - not untypically in terms of the Classic, a Mac for home use to compliment what they/their kids were using in education. By that time, nobody who wanted a Mac would have bought a PC except for the price - which means that the Classic provided a viable alternative to the total crap that Windows then was, to those who didn't want one. There was nothing wrong then with Apple supporting their market, regardless of what others think today.
@@AndyO-f7k What's with the fanboying? This does not change the fact that it cost over 3x its real value at the point it came out. An Amiga 500 had an m68k, along with all the advanced 2D graphics and sound hardware. 16 colours. A graphical OS. And you could emulate this exact Macintosh Classic at full speed alongside all of that!!! And you know how much it cost? $700. In 1987. You bet it was dirt cheap by 1991. I somehow doubt a 40 MB hard disk and 2 MB RAM cost $1200.
I'm glad you mentioned these for school usage, as I remember in 5th grade my class was selected to do a 2 day(Tuesdays, and Thursdays if I remember correctly) a week pilot program at the local college(USC Aiken) on computers, advanced math, science, and future tech, and the whole classroom we were in was full of Mac Classic machines all networked together over AppleTalk, and as someone who was a Commodore, and PC user at the time at home I was like where's the color?!?! 😅
Colin, I love watching your videos, and I love watching you do deep cleaning on parts. What drives me crazy is how you don't seem to the dust and dirt off other parts! You applied lubricant without cleaning it first!
I wish they had a store like you mentioned here in Florida! I used a Mac Classic teaching in the Mid 90s as my daily driver until I got a IIci with a huge B&W Monitor.
Great vid... Love my Mac Classic. 4M RAM is plenty if you are looking to relive that Monochrome compact Mac feel. And the Superdrive, with its ability to read MSDOS floppies makes transferring data/programs to/from it so much nicer... And as you mentioned, it was the first "affordable" Macintosh, and people sometimes forget how big a deal that was... Also, the ROM disk, while probably not a big deal back in the day, can come in REALLY handy nowadays to test the machine.... That said, if you are shopping for one and it only has 1M RAM, you probably want to think twice, because you REALLY want one that comes with that RAM board...
The Classic was our family’s first Mac, after we declared our Apple //e to be just a little too out of date. The 2MB of RAM that it shipped with, with System 7 preinstalled, was way too light and the 4MB upgrade was done almost immediately. Have to admit, I didn’t know about the ROM disk…that would’ve been interesting to see.
Thanks for yet another superb video, Colin. Not the all too typical recap video but a very informative lesson in how an otherwise ignored machine fit into the vintage Mac history. Well done!!
(A) The moment you went to the not-B-roll for discharging the flyback transformer, I was all "yep, that's what you gotta be careful of…" I remember not having the grounding spike to do that and just waiting 24 hours (or more) for the charge to dissipate before cracking the case when I had to go inside my Plus back in the day. (B) That intro was PERFECT. (C) For some reason, I thought it was the Classic II with the ROM disk. I suppose it's been a while and my memory's just going. Just a great video overall!
I just finished 3D printing a mini one of these to house a Raspberry Pi running MiniVMac, which was a project I didn’t even know about until I saw another one of your videos and led to the purchase of the 3D printer. I blame you entirely for that project and my new “boring” replica 😂
This was the first Mac I owned outright back when I was in High school. Prior to this owned a TRS CoCo III and then a bare bones Panasonic DOS laptop. My dad had bought a Mac II used from a friend prior to this so I had experience with the Mac and I had used a Mac 512 in school before. My feeling at the time was that very in some ways “outdated” tech by 1990 when this was released, it also allowed people to buy a Mac for around $1000, which was unheard of, as the lowest end mac it replaced, the Mac Plus, was $2600. This Mac’s main strength was basic tasks like word processing, spreadsheets, black and white MacPaint type graphics, playing older monochrome Mac games, and whatever else was being done on the monochrome Macs like the 512K and Plus. Basically, all the tons of software that ran on the Mac 512k & Plus would mostly work fine in the Classic so there was a large library of software titles that ran on Classic. As a very entry level Mac it was fine if not the most exciting but it got the job done IMO.
Thanks for the battery reminder, I've been meaning to go take that battery out of my IIgs, and finally did it tonight. Dated 1991. Fortunately, still visually intact.
I was in 5th grade, and my class was selected by my state(SC) to do a 2 day a week pilot program at the local college(USC Aiken) on computers, advance mathematics, science, and future technology, and our whole class room had enough Apple classic machines for every person all networked together over Appletalk to use the printer, share files, save our work, and access programs, and they for sure did the job they needed to do, but as a Commodore 8-bit, Apple IIe, and PC user at home at the time( had a Commodore 128, and Apple IIE in my room, and my parents had a DOS 386 PC for their work), I was like where is the color?!?!
I love your content! The cleaning and restoring videos are my favorite. I would also love a more in-depth video by you on the how-tos of replacing capacitors and resistors even through there are other videos out there. Have a good day!
4:18 Never heard of this "sacraficial" cog before. Really interesting as I've found in a lot of Hifi the CD drives need a new cog. Cog discolours like seen in clip and just turns to cheese. Obviously people sell replacements now. Guess it's the same theory in them?
I've always liked the Macintosh Classic. I know it has a reputation for being boring, but the way I see it it's essentially a Macintosh Plus that benefits from being a newer design. It's capable of reading 1.44 MB floppies so it can interact with other computers more easily, and it doesn't suffer from some of the older hardware quirks of the earliest Macs. Once you see it as the Mac Plus experience but better, it's actually quite a nice machine to have.
I love how I've been watching your channel since I was 11 and I can still expect the same videos every time, best vintage tech channel imo. For context I'm 21 now lmao
I know the SEs get a lot of love as people's favourite "Vintage Compact Mac" aesthetic, but I think a lot of people like me first encountered a Mac in their school: Mac Classics or Classic IIs.
I just purchased an M4120. wont be able to open and assess if there's any damage until next week. Fingers crossed! Now I have to dabble with retro bright and all the possible rest. Thank you for this video, it was very helpful.
i so want a mac classic but they're so hard to obtain where i am and with being on disability. i had a mac se/30 growing up but when i first saw a mac classic in an acquaintance's house i fell in love and been wanting one for years. i owned a bunch of various mac desktops and laptops either given, boughten dirt cheap, or via ebay over the years. i do hope to get imac g5 i was given for free with accessories and software finally working again. i need to get logic board checked out or replaced i'm figuring.
Never had a Mac back in the day; I got my start with Windows 3.1 on an extravagantly expensive Toshiba 386, graduating to a Compaq 486 all-in-one, then Pentium, etc. . I watched this video on my MacBook Pro from 2012, which still works amazingly well, now with 16Gb of RAM.
I recapped my Mac Classic a while ago. I don't think I managed to remove a single one of the surface mount caps without lifting the pads a bit 😢. I hot glues the new caps in place thous. So hopefully they won't fall off. Apart from that problem it's working well after the recap :).
When I was a postgrad in 1995 we had these in the university PC lab. They were connected somehow to our HP Unix system and had NCSA Mosaic installed for web browsing.
Thanks for the memories. Had a 4/40 Mac Classic new. I really wanted a IIfx like I used in the school computer lab, but that one was as expensive as a car. I used my Classic for word processing, built a database of car specs (like you see in the back of a car magazine), played Need for Speed, and used a peripheral that I forget the name of to record and manipulate audio. It was kind of an early Garage Band setup. I had the idea that I would record car exhaust sounds for my database. I quickly found out that was not possible because the audio files were huge and I had no money to buy more data storage! That computer lived until 1995. At that point I had money and got a new 540c. I should have bought Apple stock instead.
One fun thing we used to do was send a print to a LaserWriter SC (SCSI connected printer) using the ROM boot - the trick was to boot, type a message and send it to the printer - all before the screen fully warmed up!
The first computer in my house was my brother's Mac Classic. Fond memories playing Monn Base and other games on that computer. Wrote many high school term papers on it, too.
The video certainly was not boring. As a new Mac user (last year, M2 MBA and M2 Pro Mac mini), it's amazing to see how far the platform has come. I only used System 7 in school. More appropriately, At Ease, but I was one of those guys who could break out of At Ease and use System 7 underneath.
One of the greats! The Classic was my first computer. Still have mine. Paid $900 in ‘91 I believe. It’s a 4MB/40MB model. It now has a rolling screen so I need to work on it. The Classic is dog slow, and the screen redraw is slow too, but it was very usable, especially with MS Word v5. System 7 will always be the classic Mac OS to me, although I remember Mac users arguing over System 6 vs System 7. Those were the good old days for sure and this machine really got me into computing. It was this vs an Amiga and obviously I went with a Mac.
I just had a WAVE of nostalgia hit me with that close up of the Apple System Notification and the little talking head with the speech bubble. I remember having an Apple Color Classic II (running System 7, then 7.1, then eventually 7.5) as a kid and seeing that and thinking "this is so cool, it's like it's talking to me!" Damn! HAHA! I got my Color Classic II in . . . 6th grade? So that was, roughly, 28 years ago? HAHA! Damn.
I was just listening to All About Chemistry this morning, which reminded me that I had a video of yours to look forward to. I'm saving this video for later so I can follow the steps to clean and lubricate the floppy drive for my SE/30. The motherboard, analog board, and Sony power supply are off getting cleaned and recapped now. I might buy one of the MacEffects cases to put them in once I get them back.
The Macintosh Classic wasn't fully bad, but it was the same specs as the Macintosh SE, but had less features. It also had a black and white screen, despite color Macs coming out at the same time. If you wanted more features for about the same price or more, you were more likely to get a Macintosh SE/30 or a Quadra/Centris.
I agree this was a bad deal. At minimum, they should have offered the 1500 Dollar version for the thousand Dollars. BUT, that said, there is just no way they were ever going to reach a reasonable price point with a color Trinitron monitor and supporting hardware. What would be the point anyway with such terrible specs? The color would have been slow as all hell.
The mac classic was my first when I collected classic macs. I found the ROM boot to be a fascinating function. I had a 16mhz clip on cpu upgrade card at one point as well. It may have been an underpowered CPU but still a nice machine.
Similar memories here. They had a bunch at my school. In grade prep or 1 the parents would volunteer to type up our stories for us on them. My mum was one of the typists, pecking at the keys as she never did lean touch typing. Then years later, playing what I think was moose hunt. Fun times!
Hey I was wondering where you got your blue scsi (time stamp 5:59) from? I need one for my Apple Macintosh classic II, I just don't know where to even get one.
I was given a Mac Classic that was in beautiful shape. I changed out the PRAM, and it needed to be recapped. I decided to sell it off because it had a limited upgrade path and at the time I was obsessed with SE/30s . I regret selling it now, I never got a SE/30... 😅
So you can soak any motherboard(including ones from laptops) in a Iso propylene bath? I never realized that you could do that to clean a motherboard. I love restoring old Lenovo Thinkpads and i wanted a way to clean the entire motherboard when it's out of the cage. Is there any special instructions on how to let it dry? Put it in the sun? Blow air on it?? Or just let it sit by itself?
About the ROM disk, the real story on that feature is the hw team used a single 512k x 8 bit rom (cheapest solution), vs the SE which used 2 128k x 8 bit parts. So there was 256k of free space. The firmware engineer (Gary Rensberger) compressed the 60x system to fit in the space, along with reclaiming the space used by the old mac team photos in the main 256k rom. Another feature is you can mount an appleshare server, select an app there to be your startup app, and you have a turnkey system that runs the server app on powerup with no HD . This was all done secretly, management didn't know about it until a month after the ROM was released to production.
Also I know you have reservations about retrobrite but have you ever considered the "bath" method? Instead of applying cream to the plastic which can cause streaking, submerge the entire case in a hydrogen peroxide solution and leave it out in the sun (or under a UV lamp) which evenly brightens the case.
I am a huge fan of your content, however if you have a mac classic please dont put off recapping the analog board. They tend to not show signs from.the front but the back. I have fixed too many to count.
Fascinating, not boring in the least. I had a Mac 512, and bought an under the mac external hard drive from (???.) I used Ready Set Go desk top publishing and More Outliner. I wrote a user manual for software that ran on a small main frame (mini-computer).
My first Mac was the Mac Classic. It was a bundled system with a Stylewriter. It still cost a FORTUNE. But damn...what an awesome machine. For years afterwards I was so ridiculously productive. My Classic was always there to get the job done. Not Boring. It's AWESOME!!!!!
The caps may not have been the issue for your issue, but if it’s going to be sold as a restored system at free geek with all the maintenance done, I really would suggest replacing the AB caps. They are notorious for going bad and leaking badly, Nichicon or not. They probably won’t last long before they go. Really enjoyed seeing another Mac fixed up though! Stuff like this, the IIsi video, other restorations, are my favorite stuff to watch here.
I saw a bunch of Nichicon PL caps in the video. Those are a replace on sight, as they leak. This is half ass restoration in my opinion, as the AB will still work for quite a few years with those leaky caps, until it one day wont, and the repair would be a nightmare...
The Mac Classic was the first Mac model I ever used. At the time, I just figured they all had hard drives installed, because how else would you boot to a GUI-driven OS? It wasn't until much later that I learned that the first couple of Mac models couldn't even use a hard drive. I never thought much of the Mac Classic, personally. Once I got past the initial wow-factor that the Mac OS enjoyed over DOS, I found the thing was dog-slow compared to most everything that wasn't one of those terrible XT-class "entry level" PCs. Before I got my own computer, a 386SX that was no powerhouse itself, I had to use the school's Mac classics for my school work; just basic word processing on it was such a chore, it was so slow. There was one SE/30 that was available to us students, and I always wondered why it felt so much faster than the Classics despite looking so much older. Turns out it felt faster because it really was.
I just opened mine up to look and i had the same battery with the same date. Thankfully also not leaking. I can't tell if any of the caps leaked on the motherboard, but I don't see any damage. I would need to send it off to someone to replace them for me.
I have a couple cousins that had Mac Classics back then. If I'd bought one, I would've gotten the $1500.00 config. Even in 1990, a Mac with no HDD and only 1 MB of RAM wasn't very useful IMHO, unless you were fine with floppy-swapping and running only System 6.X.X, LOL.
Very few of them in Europe, tbh. Never even saw a Mac until 1998 at the uni, and the only Apple computers I saw before that were at the old Science Museum in Barcelona before it got renewed 30 years ago; went there in 92 and they had the exhibits connected to several Apple II. No one got any Apple computers in Europe outside of publishers because those computers were prohibitively expensive and you couldn't justify the price, no matter how much UWSCSI you had, unless you were getting a huge ROI on the bugger. You'd get a cheap clone DOS or Windows PC for school or college and that was it.
"No one got any Apple computers in Europe outside of publishers" That just isn't true at all. Obviously, industries adjacent to publishing used Macs, and there were probably plenty of them in the broader creative realm. They weren't pervasive, but Apple sold decent numbers in the UK and France, at least, and buyers often included further and higher education institutions. Apple and other companies offering independent platforms did start to struggle in the face of DOS and Windows. In the UK, Acorn was very strong in compulsory education but was slowly losing its grip, eventually selling probably slightly more than half a million of its ARM-based RISC computers. Eventually, before it was dismantled, Acorn's education division was merged with Apple's in a joint venture to try and boost sales (mostly favouring Apple). There is no doubt that Apple had substantially larger overall sales volumes than Acorn, just in the UK. So "very few" should be "relatively few", I would argue.
For some reason our school in Russia (back then USSR of course) had a whole park of Classics and a pair of LC2s. Managed to get 3 of those and an LC when they were scrapping them, sent one classic to a friend in Italy so at least I took my part in increasing their headcount in Europe ;-) Later on when they started throwing out more stuff turned out they had also a whole park of G3 Gossamer units which have never even been installed... but they were too heavy to pick more than one up ;-)
While the problem didnt seem to be capacitors you should really check under the large capacitors right near the main power wires to the motherboard, a couple of mine looked perfectly fine but had a fair bit of leakage hidden under the base of them. Another fault of these supplies that result in low or jittery voltage is the 1n4148 diodes near the optoisoltor.
My first Mac 😍 4mb, 40mb. Aldus Pagemaker. I did dozens of monthly magazine issues for midlands Baptist church youth called Thingies Rag Mag. I’m a Mac user since 1990 so yeh. They got me !
Colin, about those tantalums, but that's just my humble opinion: I'd rather have an electolyte spill and a bit of corosion than a fire in my apartment. Maybe take a look at MLCCs. These modern multi layer ceramic capacitors are very safe as they don't catch on fire like tantalums do. Might also be cheaper in some cases, not sure though. But if we can avoid tantalums I think it is also bit better for the environment in the long run or at least we save them for those cases where there's no alternative.
I purchased a Mac 128K back in the day and then upgraded it to a 512K fat Mac the hard way (though I put in sockets for the memory chips while Apple had not). Then later would get my first paying programming job writing software for a Mac Plus. So this form factor has a certain nostalgia feels to me. However, am not so inclined to collect any such vintage Mac in this form factor as I stay away from vintage computers that have integral CRTs - their [CRTs] days on this good Earth are surely numbered. Well, I do have an oscilloscope with a CRT that I'll never part with as it's a hand-me-down from the Los Alamos research labs. My one vintage CRT exception.
Just how much free space was left on the System 6 ROM? Could you actually install anything to the System suitcase while it was running? I'd love to see if OutSpoken would even run on this system, as I've been interested in getting a 68K machine for vintage accessibility testing.
So cool. Nice vidéo. I have 2 of these classics than I founded in the streeets in France., One black and white, one color but I did nothing to them... I will try at least to remove de battery if its not already too late...
Our family had one when I was a kid. Not sure why - we already had a Mac IIcx - but maybe the Classic was so I could do homework and play basic games while my Dad used the IIcx ... And I do remember doing some word processing and games on the Classic, so I guess that worked out.
I really like your videos. I have alot of macs, over 100 and I never even thought about maintenance seeing the floppy drives. Mine always worked fine you really dig deep but I enjoy your videos. What are you do with all the max that you work on?
Mac Classic was my first computer and still one of my favorite designs. I was very close to picking a Windows 3.1 clone (it had color!) but ultimately the Mac felt more friendly. Also (ironically) because I thought I could get free games from my friend with an SE/30. I’ve bought a firehose of Apple products ever since. The 2/40MB config was just fine for the time
We had these at high school, we would goto the class early and help the teacher load all the macs prior to class so we could save time for that period of class. Most computer "nerds" back then in school were Commodore Amiga owners in my country and we were dumb founded by the price versus the Commodore Amiga who use the same CPU and a similiar GUI
I almost bought one - an Office Max had a display model for $400, floppy drive only. I first went to pick up my check from work, and when I got there I found that I was the winner of a contest; the prize was a PowerBook 160, worth $2500. I still have that laptop.
It's not boring -- it's humble!
glad to see you around.
Maybe racist should keep quiet
Nice... I don't think these are boring at all. I remember pining over one when I was a 4th grader and trying to get my dad to buy me one. Compared to my CoCo2 and my Amstrad PC1512, it looked impressive to me! Now out of my collection of vintage all-in-ones, the Classic is the only one I have left to have recapped ;)
Sarcasm*
Im glad you showed the steps to discharge the CRT - an overlooked but EXTREMELY important step.
I had an SE/30 when I was in grade 6 that didn't work. I'm amazed that I didn't electrocute myself back then.
Say what you want but my father's been pulling off CRT anode caps with no discharging for the last 30 years and never got shocked.
And if you do get shocked, it's not as deadly as people say it is.
@@masterkamen371are you trying to kill people?
@@masterkamen371 terrible advice. it's not deadly, until it is. even minor electric shocks can stop your heart! then yer dead, unless you live in a hospital bed...then you still wouldn't have great chances!
@@masterkamen371 Some people seem to get a kick out of being a safety cop.
So many memories of the Mac Classic and Classic II. My High School and Middle School were full of them. They were usually setup for word-processing, and connected via Local Talk to a Laser Printer, using the PhoneNet adapters, and with a few setups, even connected to the wider network for file sharing and access to First Class Client email. I also recall using one in the 3rd Grade (1991-92), to create a Hypercard stack that controlled a LaserDisc Player, to display video and images about Japan for a class presentation.
My first paying job as a software developer was for the Mac Plus - I worked in a tech startup along side EEs - these guys would let me borrow their logic analyzer to debug thorny memory corruption bugs. This meant popping off the case to put a connector onto the Mac's 68000 CPU. Which means, of course, the high voltage CRT was exposed. Naturally everyone knew better than to go fiddling around back there. That would never fly these days, of course. But what can I say - those were primitive times when we still used bear skins and stone knives.
Children back then were taught right about computers. Even an Apple ][ had utility. Now, today’s youth are ingrates and use smartphones and AI and laugh at the past. Sad!
I remember the apple mac computers would make the quack quack sound whenever you clicked on something lol. Your youtube channel and tech moan are my go to youtube channels that I go to for vintage gear and vintage products since I'm subscribed to you and tech moan youtube.
11:45 You need a set of TV adjustment plastic screwdrivers, partly for safety but also because if you ever adjust CRT potentiometers the plastic is non-ferrous and won't interfere with the picture so your adjustments are accurate.
I bought one of these new. My first new Mac bought. Got it cheaper as was going to college. Loved it had it a few years. Never had a problem with it. Thx for the memories!
This is one of the rare Mac Classic commentaries that actually puts this system into the correct and appropriate historical and economic context, and treats the machine with the respect it actually deserves. Those who decry this model in this day and age would do well to remember that thought: A computer with limited performance is better than no computer at all. Sales figures for the Classic prove that many people understood that in its day, even if it gets forgotten now.
But this rubbish cost like $1500 new, double that in today's value.
That's about double the price of a rubbish 386SX at the time, which gave you a few times the performance and would have come with a VGA card. 256 colours is a lot more than one.
Or worse yet, you could purchase an Amiga for $600 or probably a lot less by that time and run a System 7 virtual machine at the full speed of that Classic.
@masterkamen371 A not untypical reworking of the facts, ignoring as it does what PC/Windows systems typically were at that time, plus the niche market Apple were selling into. What it cost 'in today's value' is irrelevant, and what it cost then brought the price of a Mac into practical range for those who wanted a Mac - not untypically in terms of the Classic, a Mac for home use to compliment what they/their kids were using in education.
By that time, nobody who wanted a Mac would have bought a PC except for the price - which means that the Classic provided a viable alternative to the total crap that Windows then was, to those who didn't want one.
There was nothing wrong then with Apple supporting their market, regardless of what others think today.
@@AndyO-f7k What's with the fanboying? This does not change the fact that it cost over 3x its real value at the point it came out. An Amiga 500 had an m68k, along with all the advanced 2D graphics and sound hardware. 16 colours. A graphical OS.
And you could emulate this exact Macintosh Classic at full speed alongside all of that!!!
And you know how much it cost? $700. In 1987. You bet it was dirt cheap by 1991. I somehow doubt a 40 MB hard disk and 2 MB RAM cost $1200.
I'm glad you mentioned these for school usage, as I remember in 5th grade my class was selected to do a 2 day(Tuesdays, and Thursdays if I remember correctly) a week pilot program at the local college(USC Aiken) on computers, advanced math, science, and future tech, and the whole classroom we were in was full of Mac Classic machines all networked together over AppleTalk, and as someone who was a Commodore, and PC user at the time at home I was like where's the color?!?! 😅
Colin, I love watching your videos, and I love watching you do deep cleaning on parts. What drives me crazy is how you don't seem to the dust and dirt off other parts! You applied lubricant without cleaning it first!
This takes me back. My first computer was a Mac Classic, which I bought (new) after doing my Masters degree thesis on a Macintosh Plus.
I wish they had a store like you mentioned here in Florida! I used a Mac Classic teaching in the Mid 90s as my daily driver until I got a IIci with a huge B&W Monitor.
A Mac Classic was my first venture into vintage Macintoshs and thus it holds a special place in my collection:)
Great vid...
Love my Mac Classic. 4M RAM is plenty if you are looking to relive that Monochrome compact Mac feel.
And the Superdrive, with its ability to read MSDOS floppies makes transferring data/programs to/from it so much nicer...
And as you mentioned, it was the first "affordable" Macintosh, and people sometimes forget how big a deal that was...
Also, the ROM disk, while probably not a big deal back in the day, can come in REALLY handy nowadays to test the machine....
That said, if you are shopping for one and it only has 1M RAM, you probably want to think twice, because you REALLY want one that comes with that RAM board...
The Classic was our family’s first Mac, after we declared our Apple //e to be just a little too out of date. The 2MB of RAM that it shipped with, with System 7 preinstalled, was way too light and the 4MB upgrade was done almost immediately.
Have to admit, I didn’t know about the ROM disk…that would’ve been interesting to see.
Thanks for yet another superb video, Colin. Not the all too typical recap video but a very informative lesson in how an otherwise ignored machine fit into the vintage Mac history. Well done!!
You’re videos are always a bright spot in my day. 👏
(A) The moment you went to the not-B-roll for discharging the flyback transformer, I was all "yep, that's what you gotta be careful of…" I remember not having the grounding spike to do that and just waiting 24 hours (or more) for the charge to dissipate before cracking the case when I had to go inside my Plus back in the day.
(B) That intro was PERFECT.
(C) For some reason, I thought it was the Classic II with the ROM disk. I suppose it's been a while and my memory's just going.
Just a great video overall!
I just finished 3D printing a mini one of these to house a Raspberry Pi running MiniVMac, which was a project I didn’t even know about until I saw another one of your videos and led to the purchase of the 3D printer. I blame you entirely for that project and my new “boring” replica 😂
You just inspired my next project haha 😂
What a pretty machine! Nice job on this one, I'm glad getting it back up to snuff wasn't terribly complicated👍🏼
The first computer I ever used was a Mac Classic. My dad would bring his home from work every now and then.
This was the first Mac I owned outright back when I was in High school. Prior to this owned a TRS CoCo III and then a bare bones Panasonic DOS laptop. My dad had bought a Mac II used from a friend prior to this so I had experience with the Mac and I had used a Mac 512 in school before. My feeling at the time was that very in some ways “outdated” tech by 1990 when this was released, it also allowed people to buy a Mac for around $1000, which was unheard of, as the lowest end mac it replaced, the Mac Plus, was $2600.
This Mac’s main strength was basic tasks like word processing, spreadsheets, black and white MacPaint type graphics, playing older monochrome Mac games, and whatever else was being done on the monochrome Macs like the 512K and Plus. Basically, all the tons of software that ran on the Mac 512k & Plus would mostly work fine in the Classic so there was a large library of software titles that ran on Classic. As a very entry level Mac it was fine if not the most exciting but it got the job done IMO.
Thanks for the battery reminder, I've been meaning to go take that battery out of my IIgs, and finally did it tonight. Dated 1991. Fortunately, still visually intact.
My high school received a large donation of those (along w/ a handful of IIs).
I was in 5th grade, and my class was selected by my state(SC) to do a 2 day a week pilot program at the local college(USC Aiken) on computers, advance mathematics, science, and future technology, and our whole class room had enough Apple classic machines for every person all networked together over Appletalk to use the printer, share files, save our work, and access programs, and they for sure did the job they needed to do, but as a Commodore 8-bit, Apple IIe, and PC user at home at the time( had a Commodore 128, and Apple IIE in my room, and my parents had a DOS 386 PC for their work), I was like where is the color?!?!
I love your content! The cleaning and restoring videos are my favorite. I would also love a more in-depth video by you on the how-tos of replacing capacitors and resistors even through there are other videos out there. Have a good day!
4:18 Never heard of this "sacraficial" cog before. Really interesting as I've found in a lot of Hifi the CD drives need a new cog. Cog discolours like seen in clip and just turns to cheese. Obviously people sell replacements now. Guess it's the same theory in them?
I've always liked the Macintosh Classic. I know it has a reputation for being boring, but the way I see it it's essentially a Macintosh Plus that benefits from being a newer design. It's capable of reading 1.44 MB floppies so it can interact with other computers more easily, and it doesn't suffer from some of the older hardware quirks of the earliest Macs. Once you see it as the Mac Plus experience but better, it's actually quite a nice machine to have.
I love how I've been watching your channel since I was 11 and I can still expect the same videos every time, best vintage tech channel imo. For context I'm 21 now lmao
I know the SEs get a lot of love as people's favourite "Vintage Compact Mac" aesthetic, but I think a lot of people like me first encountered a Mac in their school: Mac Classics or Classic IIs.
IMHO this model and the Classic II are the best looking compact Macs and I display one prominently.
I just purchased an M4120. wont be able to open and assess if there's any damage until next week. Fingers crossed! Now I have to dabble with retro bright and all the possible rest. Thank you for this video, it was very helpful.
i so want a mac classic but they're so hard to obtain where i am and with being on disability. i had a mac se/30 growing up but when i first saw a mac classic in an acquaintance's house i fell in love and been wanting one for years. i owned a bunch of various mac desktops and laptops either given, boughten dirt cheap, or via ebay over the years. i do hope to get imac g5 i was given for free with accessories and software finally working again. i need to get logic board checked out or replaced i'm figuring.
I really enjoyed so much all about this restoration, good job!!
I can assure you, people love these. I restore them almost daily. They all need new caps, both logic and analog board.
Yep. IMHO this and the Classic II are the best looking of the compact Macs.
I need to find someone to recap mine. I’m currently not in a position to do it myself.
@@SteveSteeleSoundSymphony if you’re in the states, I do full restores on the logic board and analog boards. Amigaofrochester is my business
Never had a Mac back in the day; I got my start with Windows 3.1 on an extravagantly expensive Toshiba 386, graduating to a Compaq 486 all-in-one, then Pentium, etc. .
I watched this video on my MacBook Pro from 2012, which still works amazingly well, now with 16Gb of RAM.
I recapped my Mac Classic a while ago. I don't think I managed to remove a single one of the surface mount caps without lifting the pads a bit 😢. I hot glues the new caps in place thous. So hopefully they won't fall off. Apart from that problem it's working well after the recap :).
When I was a postgrad in 1995 we had these in the university PC lab. They were connected somehow to our HP Unix system and had NCSA Mosaic installed for web browsing.
Thanks for the memories. Had a 4/40 Mac Classic new. I really wanted a IIfx like I used in the school computer lab, but that one was as expensive as a car. I used my Classic for word processing, built a database of car specs (like you see in the back of a car magazine), played Need for Speed, and used a peripheral that I forget the name of to record and manipulate audio. It was kind of an early Garage Band setup. I had the idea that I would record car exhaust sounds for my database. I quickly found out that was not possible because the audio files were huge and I had no money to buy more data storage! That computer lived until 1995. At that point I had money and got a new 540c. I should have bought Apple stock instead.
One fun thing we used to do was send a print to a LaserWriter SC (SCSI connected printer) using the ROM boot - the trick was to boot, type a message and send it to the printer - all before the screen fully warmed up!
I always love your videos. Your voice is calming, and your video quality 👌
The first computer in my house was my brother's Mac Classic. Fond memories playing Monn Base and other games on that computer. Wrote many high school term papers on it, too.
The video certainly was not boring. As a new Mac user (last year, M2 MBA and M2 Pro Mac mini), it's amazing to see how far the platform has come. I only used System 7 in school. More appropriately, At Ease, but I was one of those guys who could break out of At Ease and use System 7 underneath.
One of the greats! The Classic was my first computer. Still have mine. Paid $900 in ‘91 I believe. It’s a 4MB/40MB model. It now has a rolling screen so I need to work on it. The Classic is dog slow, and the screen redraw is slow too, but it was very usable, especially with MS Word v5. System 7 will always be the classic Mac OS to me, although I remember Mac users arguing over System 6 vs System 7. Those were the good old days for sure and this machine really got me into computing. It was this vs an Amiga and obviously I went with a Mac.
I just had a WAVE of nostalgia hit me with that close up of the Apple System Notification and the little talking head with the speech bubble. I remember having an Apple Color Classic II (running System 7, then 7.1, then eventually 7.5) as a kid and seeing that and thinking "this is so cool, it's like it's talking to me!" Damn! HAHA! I got my Color Classic II in . . . 6th grade? So that was, roughly, 28 years ago? HAHA! Damn.
I was just listening to All About Chemistry this morning, which reminded me that I had a video of yours to look forward to. I'm saving this video for later so I can follow the steps to clean and lubricate the floppy drive for my SE/30. The motherboard, analog board, and Sony power supply are off getting cleaned and recapped now. I might buy one of the MacEffects cases to put them in once I get them back.
The Macintosh Classic wasn't fully bad, but it was the same specs as the Macintosh SE, but had less features. It also had a black and white screen, despite color Macs coming out at the same time.
If you wanted more features for about the same price or more, you were more likely to get a Macintosh SE/30 or a Quadra/Centris.
I agree this was a bad deal. At minimum, they should have offered the 1500 Dollar version for the thousand Dollars.
BUT, that said, there is just no way they were ever going to reach a reasonable price point with a color Trinitron monitor and supporting hardware. What would be the point anyway with such terrible specs? The color would have been slow as all hell.
The SE/30 was about two and a half times more expensive than the Classic...Not really about the same price for a lot of people.
An SE would be nice to see again. Those machines were so cool.
The mac classic was my first when I collected classic macs. I found the ROM boot to be a fascinating function. I had a 16mhz clip on cpu upgrade card at one point as well. It may have been an underpowered CPU but still a nice machine.
I still have fond memories of these in school. If someone was selling a fully restored, 'as new' one in Australia I'd snap it up in a heart beat
Similar memories here. They had a bunch at my school. In grade prep or 1 the parents would volunteer to type up our stories for us on them. My mum was one of the typists, pecking at the keys as she never did lean touch typing.
Then years later, playing what I think was moose hunt. Fun times!
There's a Plus near me with a wobbly monitor for a few hundred bucks. This video confirms my thoughts that I'm not good enough to repair it myself.
our first ever family computer was a Classic, we had it for about 3 or 4 years before we upgraded to a LC630 with FPU.
Hey I was wondering where you got your blue scsi (time stamp 5:59) from? I need one for my Apple Macintosh classic II, I just don't know where to even get one.
I was given a Mac Classic that was in beautiful shape. I changed out the PRAM, and it needed to be recapped. I decided to sell it off because it had a limited upgrade path and at the time I was obsessed with SE/30s . I regret selling it now, I never got a SE/30... 😅
So you can soak any motherboard(including ones from laptops) in a Iso propylene bath? I never realized that you could do that to clean a motherboard. I love restoring old Lenovo Thinkpads and i wanted a way to clean the entire motherboard when it's out of the cage. Is there any special instructions on how to let it dry? Put it in the sun? Blow air on it?? Or just let it sit by itself?
About the ROM disk, the real story on that feature is the hw team used a single 512k x 8 bit rom (cheapest solution), vs the SE which used 2 128k x 8 bit parts. So there was 256k of free space. The firmware engineer (Gary Rensberger) compressed the 60x system to fit in the space, along with reclaiming the space used by the old mac team photos in the main 256k rom. Another feature is you can mount an appleshare server, select an app there to be your startup app, and you have a turnkey system that runs the server app on powerup with no HD . This was all done secretly, management didn't know about it until a month after the ROM was released to production.
Also I know you have reservations about retrobrite but have you ever considered the "bath" method? Instead of applying cream to the plastic which can cause streaking, submerge the entire case in a hydrogen peroxide solution and leave it out in the sun (or under a UV lamp) which evenly brightens the case.
I am a huge fan of your content, however if you have a mac classic please dont put off recapping the analog board. They tend to not show signs from.the front but the back. I have fixed too many to count.
You're right - I have often seen the leaking right under the can where it can't be detected until the cap is removed.
Fascinating, not boring in the least. I had a Mac 512, and bought an under the mac external hard drive from (???.) I used Ready Set Go desk top publishing and More Outliner. I wrote a user manual for software that ran on a small main frame (mini-computer).
My first Mac was the Mac Classic. It was a bundled system with a Stylewriter. It still cost a FORTUNE.
But damn...what an awesome machine. For years afterwards I was so ridiculously productive. My Classic was always there to get the job done.
Not Boring. It's AWESOME!!!!!
The caps may not have been the issue for your issue, but if it’s going to be sold as a restored system at free geek with all the maintenance done, I really would suggest replacing the AB caps. They are notorious for going bad and leaking badly, Nichicon or not. They probably won’t last long before they go.
Really enjoyed seeing another Mac fixed up though! Stuff like this, the IIsi video, other restorations, are my favorite stuff to watch here.
I saw a bunch of Nichicon PL caps in the video. Those are a replace on sight, as they leak. This is half ass restoration in my opinion, as the AB will still work for quite a few years with those leaky caps, until it one day wont, and the repair would be a nightmare...
@@michvod yeah… I hope whoever buys it is savvy enough to replace them. Those are right up there with the ELNA LongLife caps.
The Mac Classic was the first Mac model I ever used. At the time, I just figured they all had hard drives installed, because how else would you boot to a GUI-driven OS? It wasn't until much later that I learned that the first couple of Mac models couldn't even use a hard drive.
I never thought much of the Mac Classic, personally. Once I got past the initial wow-factor that the Mac OS enjoyed over DOS, I found the thing was dog-slow compared to most everything that wasn't one of those terrible XT-class "entry level" PCs. Before I got my own computer, a 386SX that was no powerhouse itself, I had to use the school's Mac classics for my school work; just basic word processing on it was such a chore, it was so slow. There was one SE/30 that was available to us students, and I always wondered why it felt so much faster than the Classics despite looking so much older. Turns out it felt faster because it really was.
I just opened mine up to look and i had the same battery with the same date. Thankfully also not leaking. I can't tell if any of the caps leaked on the motherboard, but I don't see any damage. I would need to send it off to someone to replace them for me.
I have a couple cousins that had Mac Classics back then. If I'd bought one, I would've gotten the $1500.00 config. Even in 1990, a Mac with no HDD and only 1 MB of RAM wasn't very useful IMHO, unless you were fine with floppy-swapping and running only System 6.X.X, LOL.
My usual problem isn't taking anything apart… it's putting it back together! 😂😂🤦🤦
Wow you are inspiring me to come back to electronics engineering, which I found old apple products quite a lot in many places in Thailand 😊
I like restoration projects on old vintage electronics, I wonder if those old CRT displays could be replaced with more modern and light weight LCDs
Boring? This thing was the most amazing thing I saw as a kid on school when they started putting them in classrooms. This is a piece of history.
Might stop by Free Geek during lunch today and give Roman some of my money for this object if its still there.
Very few of them in Europe, tbh. Never even saw a Mac until 1998 at the uni, and the only Apple computers I saw before that were at the old Science Museum in Barcelona before it got renewed 30 years ago; went there in 92 and they had the exhibits connected to several Apple II.
No one got any Apple computers in Europe outside of publishers because those computers were prohibitively expensive and you couldn't justify the price, no matter how much UWSCSI you had, unless you were getting a huge ROI on the bugger. You'd get a cheap clone DOS or Windows PC for school or college and that was it.
"No one got any Apple computers in Europe outside of publishers"
That just isn't true at all. Obviously, industries adjacent to publishing used Macs, and there were probably plenty of them in the broader creative realm. They weren't pervasive, but Apple sold decent numbers in the UK and France, at least, and buyers often included further and higher education institutions.
Apple and other companies offering independent platforms did start to struggle in the face of DOS and Windows. In the UK, Acorn was very strong in compulsory education but was slowly losing its grip, eventually selling probably slightly more than half a million of its ARM-based RISC computers. Eventually, before it was dismantled, Acorn's education division was merged with Apple's in a joint venture to try and boost sales (mostly favouring Apple).
There is no doubt that Apple had substantially larger overall sales volumes than Acorn, just in the UK. So "very few" should be "relatively few", I would argue.
For some reason our school in Russia (back then USSR of course) had a whole park of Classics and a pair of LC2s. Managed to get 3 of those and an LC when they were scrapping them, sent one classic to a friend in Italy so at least I took my part in increasing their headcount in Europe ;-)
Later on when they started throwing out more stuff turned out they had also a whole park of G3 Gossamer units which have never even been installed... but they were too heavy to pick more than one up ;-)
While the problem didnt seem to be capacitors you should really check under the large capacitors right near the main power wires to the motherboard, a couple of mine looked perfectly fine but had a fair bit of leakage hidden under the base of them.
Another fault of these supplies that result in low or jittery voltage is the 1n4148 diodes near the optoisoltor.
The Mac Classic and Classic II are my favorite design! I don't like those horizontal lines on the SE and SE/30
Could you do a guide describing which tantalum caps are good and which ones are bad?
Cool video. Gotta love a low-spec king.
And so, what is the party trick to make this chassis into a hot rod. A Raspberry Pi and a touch screen, or what is the latest ideas?
Love these refurb/repair videos !
My first Mac 😍 4mb, 40mb. Aldus Pagemaker. I did dozens of monthly magazine issues for midlands Baptist church youth called Thingies Rag Mag.
I’m a Mac user since 1990 so yeh. They got me !
I got a Macintosh classic 11 I was given but it’s missing logic board
Any reason for why you wanna use tantalum caps? It doesn't seem like they have a longer lifespan, and I've read that they can fail spectacularly.
I grew up with one of these in my home. So thanks for making a video on it, even though you find it boring.
Dude I love your channel you’re the best and that clickbait-y title rules. You have to be Twin Cities’s best customer
Thanks for sharing this. This is the first computer I can remember using back in the early 90s.
Colin,
about those tantalums, but that's just my humble opinion:
I'd rather have an electolyte spill and a bit of corosion than a fire in my apartment.
Maybe take a look at MLCCs. These modern multi layer ceramic capacitors are very safe as they don't catch on fire like tantalums do.
Might also be cheaper in some cases, not sure though.
But if we can avoid tantalums I think it is also bit better for the environment in the long run or at least we save them for those cases where there's no alternative.
Lots of hardware to play with in free time.
Great vid as always, but did you fix the screen with the voltage change? At the end I saw scan lines. Might have been the camera?
Love these Mac classics, the perfect computer shape. Hard to find here!
I would love to get one of these simply to do word processing and some basic accounting on.
Nice! Memories of my first Mac - an SE 40/4.
I purchased a Mac 128K back in the day and then upgraded it to a 512K fat Mac the hard way (though I put in sockets for the memory chips while Apple had not). Then later would get my first paying programming job writing software for a Mac Plus. So this form factor has a certain nostalgia feels to me. However, am not so inclined to collect any such vintage Mac in this form factor as I stay away from vintage computers that have integral CRTs - their [CRTs] days on this good Earth are surely numbered. Well, I do have an oscilloscope with a CRT that I'll never part with as it's a hand-me-down from the Los Alamos research labs. My one vintage CRT exception.
Just how much free space was left on the System 6 ROM? Could you actually install anything to the System suitcase while it was running? I'd love to see if OutSpoken would even run on this system, as I've been interested in getting a 68K machine for vintage accessibility testing.
hello Colin! Same calm video as always.
Ok, that light switch being down for on is KILLING ME!
So cool. Nice vidéo. I have 2 of these classics than I founded in the streeets in France., One black and white, one color but I did nothing to them... I will try at least to remove de battery if its not already too late...
I’ll always be partial to the 030/040 era, but these are so iconic I can’t help but love them.
I didn’t know how to fix the screen wobble issue, thanks!
Our family had one when I was a kid. Not sure why - we already had a Mac IIcx - but maybe the Classic was so I could do homework and play basic games while my Dad used the IIcx ...
And I do remember doing some word processing and games on the Classic, so I guess that worked out.
Glad my suggestion of turning up the voltage worked! 👍
I'm not 100% sure if it was that Mac or not but remember playing Oregon Trail on it in the elementary school computer lab 😁
I really like your videos. I have alot of macs, over 100 and I never even thought about maintenance seeing the floppy drives. Mine always worked fine you really dig deep but I enjoy your videos. What are you do with all the max that you work on?
Mac Classic was my first computer and still one of my favorite designs. I was very close to picking a Windows 3.1 clone (it had color!) but ultimately the Mac felt more friendly. Also (ironically) because I thought I could get free games from my friend with an SE/30. I’ve bought a firehose of Apple products ever since. The 2/40MB config was just fine for the time
We had these at high school, we would goto the class early and help the teacher load all the macs prior to class so we could save time for that period of class. Most computer "nerds" back then in school were Commodore Amiga owners in my country and we were dumb founded by the price versus the Commodore Amiga who use the same CPU and a similiar GUI