I do it because I love this stuff as I’m sure you feel the same about your collection as well… having said that, would be nice to get a shoutout from Apple ;). Seriously though, this was a lot of fun and I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Considering Apple nowadays, it won’t happen unfortunately. The Apple from back then is dead. Now it’s “highest valued tech company in the world” Apple. Greedy Apple.
stumbled across this by accident and was totally blown away!!! The unboxing was pure gold!!! and seeing that screen light up at the end made me grin from ear to ear!
I bought one of these new, and I remember the unboxing experience as being magical, watching your video I had a sense of the unique smell of a 90s Mac coming out of the box! The manual for these was top quality, as was everything including the packing materials. It was my first Mac. Yesterday I opened a MacBook Air 15” and I feel the unboxing experience today is still quite an experience.
I feel like smell is one of the strongest emotional triggers - and this smelled exactly like you would expect! It was awesome. I think Apple still does a great job with the unboxing experience, but to your point nothing beats the old school manuals that were so comprehensive they taught you how to use a mouse!
Excellent work. It's great that this little piece of computer history found its way into the hands of someone who could restore it. That's gotta be the nicest mac classic specimen around.
I personally hate the mentality of people keeping old electronics in the box, while it's certainly a way to preserve the contents of the box... the main attraction itself is likely to have failed and is just rotting in its own packaging. Great job giving this thing the life it deserves.
Holy crap, this video had me emotionally invested in that little Mac (it liiiiiiives). This was hugely interesting and informative, but also just had a really nice story to it. I can't wait to see what else you put up. This was wonderful!
Heard about this video on the Nextlander Ramblecast and was going to look it up and here it is in my feed like Google was listening..... Anyway, cool video!
@@polymattRamblecast 120. Unfortunately, it's behind a paywall. I'd try to link you a copy here, but I've had comments with even the most veiled URLs I can fathom be auto-deleted.
Outstanding. I remember when they were released (in Australia, 1991?), I schlepped over to ComputerLand to drool over it for a while, then went home to my Z80 computer.
Wow! I'll echo what other commenters have said: video is enthralling and masterfully produced. Yea... your channel is going to take off with this type of content! And... what a find!! Thanks for sharing the process.. a true showcase of next-level diagnostic and troubleshooting skills, repair skills, and all captured with top-notch production quality!
This was a great video, my first experience with a Mac was a Macintosh Plus, it had a battery backup, etc. We used it in Tanzania, East Africa in the early 90s and it was a workhorse. I was a kid and mostly used it for games, but my dad did publishing with it for the local print shop we were supporting as part of Eastern Mennonite Missions. I will never forget that little beast, even after the battery backup was killed in a power surge, we still used it and it was a sad day when we left it behind when we came back to the states. I will always remember playing Scarab of Ra, and the various kids games I had on it, and looking at the newsletters we did up on it, it has that authentic 90s mac look that was unique. Truly a magnificent piece of technology! It brought tears to me eyes seeing that untouched piece of history you restored.
@@polymatt Yea, I really appreciate you sharing your restoration video, and taking the time, effort and expense to restore that thing. I'm amazed that some of these old computers are being found untouched to this day. Seeing a mac or an IBM with a massive spiral bound notebook as a manual, and being lovingly individually packaged really is a dissonance between then and now. We had the most powerful desktop computer in the village, our competition was one of those portable LCD style IBMs or something that the Canadian missionaries up the road had. Having a PC in the 90s in Tanzania was no small matter, the print shop my day was upgrading and eventually took over management of, actually was typesetting with print tech from the 40s or something, and the stuff we did with our tech we brought and new print shop stuff let the village church go from typesetting basic hymnals by hand to us printing calendars, full books, new literature and so much more. It was eye-opening just how far we pushed that village into the modern era. People don't appreciate just how portable those little macs were back in the 90s, and just where around the world they ended up and the massive impact that they had all over the globe. They were very versatile and came in so many varieties.
AWESON! I also have an old Mac at my home, but I used to mistakenly believe that it would start up anytime I turned it on. I have now learned that it requires tremendous effort to make it work. Your video has been a great learning experience for me!
Glad it helped! Before I started getting back into these computers a few years back, I totally thought they would just turn on. Its been a really cool experiencing learning about them on a hardware level and seeing what time does to some components.
7:30 ALWAYS when working on B&W cube Macs, the very first thing after removing the back case is to unplug the small board from the CRT. See your SCSI ribbon cable touching it as you unplug? One wrong move and you crack the CRT, because the board will lever against the pins on the CRT. Back in 1999 when I started working at Apple dealers, the techs taught me this rule.
@@polymatt Indeed! Especially nowadays where replacement tubes are no longer manufactured! Also -- and this tip is more for others than for you, since you did it right -- always remove the case by lifting it straight away. Attempting to angle the rear case can also hit the CRT board and break the tube...
Wow-the condition of that classic makes it look like you went through a time-warp and brought it back! Looks AMAZING! Great job restoring it! Thanks for another great video.
Thanks so much! That was the first time I’ve unboxed a compact Mac. Even when I was a kid and had one we bought it used from our school. This was such a cool experience and glad I was able to get it working! Thanks again for watching and glad you enjoyed!
Geez, I'm pc user and builder, but I was just captivated by this video (my first personal computer, though, was a Mac Plus, bought it in 1986, had it for four years and it worked great). Wow, nice job. Thanks for posting this. You do geek proud.
What an awesome video. From Macintrash to Macintosh! Now you can go play Zork! But seriously, I throughly enjoyed that. After getting blamed for breaking one of those as a kid (wasn’t my fault) it’s amazing what modern parts can do to old machines.
Man, seeing a pristine mac classic really brings me back. That perfect color, no discolorations, no aging on any of the metal. When I was a young kid, I was too poor to get a computer. Game consoles were about the extent our finances would allow, but my friend got a brand new mac classic just for his bedroom (lucky punk). I remember being so excited with him when his dad walked in the door with it and brought it to his room, unboxed it, and put it on his desk. ...Fortunately our power on moment was a flip of the switch, contrasting with yours. ;)
I feel like I've come across a multi-million subscriber channel before it got big. Fantastic video and what a computer! Wonder how many of perfectly(-ish) preserved computers like this are still sitting in someone's attic or garage just waiting to be found.
it's crazy how this wasn't permanently damaged! i wasn't around when old tech like this existed but it's always interesting to see how it was done back in the day before so many of the standards today got established with the modern PC
I had forgotten what a sweet little computer the Classic was! After the Mac Plus I went straight to Mac II's with 24bit colour. I have a company, 'David Myers and Associates' based in Australia and I was commissioned to design and produce Apple's very first digital 'Direct To Screen' presentation introducing 'Mac OS-7' and all of it's features. I designed the presentations on a Mac II with 20Mb SCSI 'Syquest' external drives and Apple ran the shows on other Mac II's connected to modified Sony RGB theater projectors, worldwide. You have inspired me to search for a similar unit as beautiful as yours. Thanks for bringing back all those memories! Cheers, David.
Thanks for making this video. Have some mac. My old 1980s Amiga still work. Seeing a NEW old computer coming out of the box.... so perfectly new. Miss that old light-grey color.
This was amazing to watch. I love watching unboxing vids of NOS retro computers and video game systems etc. I have a new in the box sealed ColecoVision that I am contemplating opening but love just admiring it on my shelf for now. I had one as a kid so its so nostalgic for me.
Man, this was amazing! Judging by the quality of the video I easily thought you were an established UA-camr with a million subscribers. A tiny advice: the subtitles were sometimes a bit too quick to read, you might leave them on for a few more seconds in your future videos. At any rate, I see great future ahead of you, keep up the good work!
Thanks so much and great advice. Luckily subtitles are something I can go back and edit at any time. I agree some are too quick so I’ll go back and see if I can pace them out a bit more. Thanks again for the kind words and glad you like the content!
@@mojoblues66he put subtitles for ppl who are deaf hard of hearing that’s why UA-camrs just like my channel put subtitles but I can’t find a program to do it automatically
Gosh this was a joy to watch. I have a G3 project on the horizon needed the analog board recapped. I’m experienced with soldering so it doesn’t worry me, but this video definitely reignited the itch to get in and do it
Very nice video. Just goes to further show that no aluminum electrolytic capacitor has eternal life, not even on a sealed and never-used machine. I must say I did grimace when I saw that paper speaker get dunked in IPA, but it certainly was a relief to see it works fine after drying. Also very interesting to see just how many components need replacing, above and beyond just the capacitors. Your video does a long way to warn people who buy sealed computers that they still probably need repair work, and such would need to be factored into the cost of the machine. No doubt you paid a pretty penny for that sealed Classic. But it certainly is lovely to behold, and now that it's working, I know it means something very special to you. It would to me. Thanks for sharing!
Wow I am impressed and it was so entertaining to watch it being restored into Mac Classic from start to finish. And the length was not long or shot. Beautifully edited.
The process of opening up the box of a new computer for the first time when computers were something rather special in the home (not rare, but far from ubiquitous, unlike today), the excitement at seeing the new model up close and personal and giddily knowing that it's YOURS; I miss that. That Mac looks imacculate inside, the PCBs and chips looking brand spanking new. That cruelly created the illusion that it was going to fire up first time! Great work getting it back up and running.
Great vid! I have a Classic II that one day I'll have to recap as well when i get comfortable enough to do it. Speaker's starting to distort and the display had lines during boot randomly. Fun times await
Didn’t realize you were the thinkpad 701c guy until after I finished this! Bravo to your work preserving those amazing laptops, and this Classic too! You’ve got great skills and I hope you keep making videos. Would love to have voiceovers too if you’re up to it.
Thanks so much - yeah, I've definitely done a deep dive on the 701c line but I liked the idea of using this format to show some of the other things I do as well. Glad you enjoyed it!
Nice work, man. Subscribed. The no-talking approach is reminiscent of Primitive Technology’s vids, but with background music instead of chirping birds and other woodsy sounds. That said, you’ve got a good speaking voice, so narrating as you go would certainly work. My first Mac was a Classic II, which I bought in 1992. I still remember the nerdy excitement I felt when I unboxed it. 🤓
You could get some Pantone colors for us. Most seem to remember it in a beige ish color. While I remember it more as a broken white/grey color. Well done. Nicely restored to working conditions. 👍🏻👍🏻
So awesome to see that original gray instead of the oxidized yellow color unsealed ones become. And to see that boot screen after all your effort, a thing of such beauty and boot speed.
Great video! Thanks for making it! In case it isn't mentioned, the power board outputs very high voltages, so I was a little stressed out when you just had it powered on the bench like that. There is a big resistor that you can remove one leg of to make sure power doesn't go to the high voltage parts of the board. I don't remember which one of the top of my head, I think it's one of the blue ones maybe, but Adrian's Digital Basement has a video where he shows this. If it were me I'd also verify in the schematics. The thing about high voltage is that, depending on the voltage and materials, your gloves might not actually be enough insulation and it could just right through. So this is a serious danger here! Also, that voltage could jump through the air and fry components on your motherboard (logic board) even if it isn't touching it. I went back and checked but I couldn't tell if you actually disabled the high voltage. But I hope that in the future you will if you aren't already! Work safely! Also... you left the battery in while submersing the board. It's probably okay but not the best idea as it could short something out.
Hey, thanks so much! I didn't know about the resistor trick - I'll definitely have to check that out, and as far as the battery - I actually caught that as I was doing it :D. If you watch the video, the very next clip the battery is removed and sitting on the side of the IPA bath. The good thing was that I was using 99% but still a chance that you don't need to take! Glad you enjoyed the video.
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed the video. It was such a fun project for me to work on. This was one of the first computers I owned that was “my” computer growing up.
Great job, you did this little machine a good turn with care and precision. Great to see it's in good hands. Incredible to see it in original condition like this.
Nice, although I was concerned about dunking the speaker in IPA, and powering up the power supply with the ultor cap disconnected, You had it awfully close to the neck board 13:54, if it did fire up I would expect a large arc and possible damage. This does show the downside of computers, assuming nothing is wrong, it is all but totally useless these days (for it's original intended use)
This actually humbled me. I was *_sure_* it was gonna boot, because in my experience leaky caps from the '80s/'90s are normally from years of hot running. But you called it, man!
When I was attending Uni in the early 90's I remember there was a student in my maths class always carry his Macintosh Classic into the lecture theatre just like what they do with laptops nowadays. Thanks for the fond memories.
Thats amazing - my first exposure to these was in grade school. We had an entire lab of Apple II systems and one day we got a couple compact macs. Everyone fought over getting a seat at one. I love the nostalgia something like this brings back for people. Glad you enjoyed watching!
What an amazing video! I've never owned a Classic Mac but used Commodore C64 and Amiga back in the day. I find videos like this quite moving that people are still loving these old machines and giving them a new lease on life. Seeing this brand new (old stock) Mac being unboxed was quite special!! Also I am wondering if you could let me know where you sourced the music from. Amazing stuff! :D
Man I’m glad you found one brand new and you were able to fix it and get it working. I remember playing the Oregon Trail on one of them machines. Man brought back some memories. Good job on getting this piece of history running again. 👍
I'm so glad I randomly stumbled upon this video...simply amazing video thank you so much for going into detail and showing your skills. When the chime came in and the monitor turned on I was like YASSS! lol!
Same, I always loved the super compact design. My first time dialing up to a BBS was on one of these and whenever I see one, I associate it with the "soothing" sounds of dialup. Was a magical experience back in the day.
Running the analog and logic boards out of the case like that is risky business. Disconnecting the yoke doesn't remove B+ from the flyback in that model, so if both boards are working you have horizontal drive and the HV will come up! That loose anode cap could arc to the logic board and blow something up, or arc to you and stand your hair on end. It wouldn't kill you but it won't feel good. Without the yoke the deflection circuit is not tuned and you can blow the horizontal output transistor. Better to leave the logic board out of it and check voltages on the plug. They should be stable without the logic board, and you're guaranteed to have no HV.
That is straight out of the 90s for me. My high school had a lab of Mac SE30's and Classics, that we used every day. The nostalgia is almost overwhelming.
Cool video! My dad had one of those when I was young. He wrote textbooks for schools on it. 10 inch greyscale monitor and one button mouse was news to me. Friends dad had PCs with 256 color monitors at 14 inch. And gaming support was lacking. At first he didn’t even have dial up internet on it. But it had Microsoft Office 6 I believe and internet explorer on it. 😁
It’s crazy when you see something that’s only 30 years old be handled like it’s an archeological find from 6,000 years ago
I totally respect your perseverance. I can’t wrap my head around how insanely complicated it must be to have the skills necessary to fix the computer.
I've never seen one of these so perfectly clean, not a speck of dust, un-yellowed plastic. Pretty.
Last time I saw one like that I was in middle school when that was new.
Stellar job - thank you for unboxing, repairing, recording, editing, posting, and preserving. Appreciate how much work you put in to this project!
I’m glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for the kind words!
I hope Apple reward you for your efforts here. Just beautiful to see this old classic piece of History get fixed and come to life
I do it because I love this stuff as I’m sure you feel the same about your collection as well… having said that, would be nice to get a shoutout from Apple ;).
Seriously though, this was a lot of fun and I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Would you consider selling it?@@polymatt
Apple only sees money signs
Considering Apple nowadays, it won’t happen unfortunately.
The Apple from back then is dead.
Now it’s “highest valued tech company in the world” Apple. Greedy Apple.
They will probably sue him
That takes me back. I used to do DTP on these things in 1991. Crazy to think how we managed with that tiny little screen.
stumbled across this by accident and was totally blown away!!! The unboxing was pure gold!!! and seeing that screen light up at the end made me grin from ear to ear!
I bought one of these new, and I remember the unboxing experience as being magical, watching your video I had a sense of the unique smell of a 90s Mac coming out of the box! The manual for these was top quality, as was everything including the packing materials. It was my first Mac. Yesterday I opened a MacBook Air 15” and I feel the unboxing experience today is still quite an experience.
I feel like smell is one of the strongest emotional triggers - and this smelled exactly like you would expect! It was awesome. I think Apple still does a great job with the unboxing experience, but to your point nothing beats the old school manuals that were so comprehensive they taught you how to use a mouse!
Excellent work. It's great that this little piece of computer history found its way into the hands of someone who could restore it. That's gotta be the nicest mac classic specimen around.
I personally hate the mentality of people keeping old electronics in the box, while it's certainly a way to preserve the contents of the box... the main attraction itself is likely to have failed and is just rotting in its own packaging. Great job giving this thing the life it deserves.
Holy crap, this video had me emotionally invested in that little Mac (it liiiiiiives). This was hugely interesting and informative, but also just had a really nice story to it. I can't wait to see what else you put up. This was wonderful!
Haha thanks so much!
You really did that Mac justice. Beautiful work. Now it will be enjoyed for many years to come.
Thank you! and that was the idea. I wanted to make sure it can stay in pristine shape and enjoyed for a long time.
Start to finish I was ENTHRALLED. Thanks so much for capturing and sharing this!
Nice! Glad you enjoyed it.
Excellent video! I enjoyed waiting it! I like the format, it’s fresh and athletic. Keep on, please! Looking forward for to next videos
Thanks and will do!
Heard about this video on the Nextlander Ramblecast and was going to look it up and here it is in my feed like Google was listening..... Anyway, cool video!
Awesome. Glad you enjoyed it! Let me know the episode so I can give it a listen 😁
@@polymattRamblecast 120. Unfortunately, it's behind a paywall. I'd try to link you a copy here, but I've had comments with even the most veiled URLs I can fathom be auto-deleted.
There. I sent a link on your website contact form.
@@orijimi much appreciated!
Wow glad to know 4:17 the Apple keyboard was assembled in Malaysia 🇲🇾 ❤
That was amazing to watch the process! Love the info in the captions.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Outstanding. I remember when they were released (in Australia, 1991?), I schlepped over to ComputerLand to drool over it for a while, then went home to my Z80 computer.
Same. These were unobtainium for me when they first came out. What was your z80? Only one I had was a Commodore 128.
Wow! I'll echo what other commenters have said: video is enthralling and masterfully produced. Yea... your channel is going to take off with this type of content! And... what a find!! Thanks for sharing the process.. a true showcase of next-level diagnostic and troubleshooting skills, repair skills, and all captured with top-notch production quality!
Thanks so much Chris! Really appreciate the support!
100% agree and thanks for pointing this out, @RetroTechChris as I might have missed it. The retro community is stelar.
Brilliant job! I worked for Apple when these were brand new and it's great to see one in such good cosmetic shape be brought back from the dead.
This was a great video, my first experience with a Mac was a Macintosh Plus, it had a battery backup, etc. We used it in Tanzania, East Africa in the early 90s and it was a workhorse. I was a kid and mostly used it for games, but my dad did publishing with it for the local print shop we were supporting as part of Eastern Mennonite Missions. I will never forget that little beast, even after the battery backup was killed in a power surge, we still used it and it was a sad day when we left it behind when we came back to the states. I will always remember playing Scarab of Ra, and the various kids games I had on it, and looking at the newsletters we did up on it, it has that authentic 90s mac look that was unique. Truly a magnificent piece of technology! It brought tears to me eyes seeing that untouched piece of history you restored.
What an amazing story. Thank you so much for sharing! Amazing how these old machines can bring back so many memories.
@@polymatt Yea, I really appreciate you sharing your restoration video, and taking the time, effort and expense to restore that thing. I'm amazed that some of these old computers are being found untouched to this day. Seeing a mac or an IBM with a massive spiral bound notebook as a manual, and being lovingly individually packaged really is a dissonance between then and now. We had the most powerful desktop computer in the village, our competition was one of those portable LCD style IBMs or something that the Canadian missionaries up the road had. Having a PC in the 90s in Tanzania was no small matter, the print shop my day was upgrading and eventually took over management of, actually was typesetting with print tech from the 40s or something, and the stuff we did with our tech we brought and new print shop stuff let the village church go from typesetting basic hymnals by hand to us printing calendars, full books, new literature and so much more. It was eye-opening just how far we pushed that village into the modern era. People don't appreciate just how portable those little macs were back in the 90s, and just where around the world they ended up and the massive impact that they had all over the globe. They were very versatile and came in so many varieties.
AWESON! I also have an old Mac at my home, but I used to mistakenly believe that it would start up anytime I turned it on. I have now learned that it requires tremendous effort to make it work. Your video has been a great learning experience for me!
Glad it helped! Before I started getting back into these computers a few years back, I totally thought they would just turn on. Its been a really cool experiencing learning about them on a hardware level and seeing what time does to some components.
Great video of an alltime Classic Apple Computer. Had this one myself. Nice job getting it back to life.
An insanely good find! Good job with the restoration.
Thanks so much - yeah it was a totally chance find. It was even local!
Fantastic video, thanks for the closeups. This is a joy to watch.
7:30 ALWAYS when working on B&W cube Macs, the very first thing after removing the back case is to unplug the small board from the CRT. See your SCSI ribbon cable touching it as you unplug? One wrong move and you crack the CRT, because the board will lever against the pins on the CRT. Back in 1999 when I started working at Apple dealers, the techs taught me this rule.
Great tip. Better safe than sorry!
@@polymatt Indeed! Especially nowadays where replacement tubes are no longer manufactured!
Also -- and this tip is more for others than for you, since you did it right -- always remove the case by lifting it straight away. Attempting to angle the rear case can also hit the CRT board and break the tube...
Great work ! Put a BlueSCSI disk and its good for another 30 years 🙂
Fantastic. Thank you. I'm in the process of restoring an old used mac classic. Very envious of your find.
Restoration can be such fun and fulfilling projects. Best of luck on your compact Mac!
Wow-the condition of that classic makes it look like you went through a time-warp and brought it back! Looks AMAZING! Great job restoring it! Thanks for another great video.
Thanks so much! That was the first time I’ve unboxed a compact Mac. Even when I was a kid and had one we bought it used from our school. This was such a cool experience and glad I was able to get it working! Thanks again for watching and glad you enjoyed!
The best thing I've seen on UA-cam lately.
Thank you!
Thanks so much!!
Great work, glad you went into this knowing exactly what to expect and what to do to get it back on its feet again. Your videography is very nice too.
This is amazing, very satisfying to watch! I wish you the best!
Geez, I'm pc user and builder, but I was just captivated by this video (my first personal computer, though, was a Mac Plus, bought it in 1986, had it for four years and it worked great). Wow, nice job. Thanks for posting this. You do geek proud.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Super cool. That is one nice restoration and thanks for sharing it! Keep up the good work.
Thank you very much!
I loved your content, edit etc. keep it
Glad you enjoy it!
What an awesome video. From Macintrash to Macintosh! Now you can go play Zork! But seriously, I throughly enjoyed that. After getting blamed for breaking one of those as a kid (wasn’t my fault) it’s amazing what modern parts can do to old machines.
A pleasure to watch such a skilfully executed repair, attention to detail gets a 10/10. Good to see such care taken with that golden oldie 👍
Hello from Siberia! It was very interesting. At 5:50 I hope you took a deep breath to feel the air of the saints of the 90s 😀
Man, seeing a pristine mac classic really brings me back. That perfect color, no discolorations, no aging on any of the metal. When I was a young kid, I was too poor to get a computer. Game consoles were about the extent our finances would allow, but my friend got a brand new mac classic just for his bedroom (lucky punk). I remember being so excited with him when his dad walked in the door with it and brought it to his room, unboxed it, and put it on his desk. ...Fortunately our power on moment was a flip of the switch, contrasting with yours. ;)
I feel like I've come across a multi-million subscriber channel before it got big. Fantastic video and what a computer! Wonder how many of perfectly(-ish) preserved computers like this are still sitting in someone's attic or garage just waiting to be found.
Amazing! Loved the unboxing, really felt like I was there. And incredible troubleshooting and tenacity to keep going. Loved it.
Thanks! This one turned out to be a bit of a rollercoaster 😁
it's crazy how this wasn't permanently damaged! i wasn't around when old tech like this existed but it's always interesting to see how it was done back in the day before so many of the standards today got established with the modern PC
I had forgotten what a sweet little computer the Classic was! After the Mac Plus I went straight to Mac II's with 24bit colour. I have a company, 'David Myers and Associates' based in Australia and I was commissioned to design and produce Apple's very first digital 'Direct To Screen' presentation introducing 'Mac OS-7' and all of it's features. I designed the presentations on a Mac II with 20Mb SCSI 'Syquest' external drives and Apple ran the shows on other Mac II's connected to modified Sony RGB theater projectors, worldwide. You have inspired me to search for a similar unit as beautiful as yours. Thanks for bringing back all those memories! Cheers, David.
Thanks David! Glad I was able to re-spark you interest. Getting to experience something like unboxing one of these is pretty unreal.
Thanks for making this video. Have some mac. My old 1980s Amiga still work. Seeing a NEW old computer coming out of the box.... so perfectly new. Miss that old light-grey color.
Wow! Been working on macs for 35 years now. This takes me back. Thanks for posting this 🙂
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video. But you should do one without music. Would love to hear that Mac click on and hear the static from the CRT monitor 🎉
Great idea - I've been thinking about doing a Sounds of Retro series :)
This was amazing to watch. I love watching unboxing vids of NOS retro computers and video game systems etc. I have a new in the box sealed ColecoVision that I am contemplating opening but love just admiring it on my shelf for now. I had one as a kid so its so nostalgic for me.
Man, this was amazing! Judging by the quality of the video I easily thought you were an established UA-camr with a million subscribers. A tiny advice: the subtitles were sometimes a bit too quick to read, you might leave them on for a few more seconds in your future videos. At any rate, I see great future ahead of you, keep up the good work!
Thanks so much and great advice. Luckily subtitles are something I can go back and edit at any time. I agree some are too quick so I’ll go back and see if I can pace them out a bit more. Thanks again for the kind words and glad you like the content!
Literally just had the same realization right before I looked at this comment.
The subtitles should be replaced by voiceover.
@@polymattwhat do you use to get subtitles on you videos I don’t want to manually put them in
@@mojoblues66he put subtitles for ppl who are deaf hard of hearing that’s why UA-camrs just like my channel put subtitles but I can’t find a program to do it automatically
Best unboxing video for this mac and you did such and awesome repair job!
Thank you! It was a fun one.
Awesome video production and what a journey, great work man.
Thanks so much. Glad you enjoyed it!
Real treat to find a video like this
Wow what an absolute work of art. It’s like opening a time capsule. Thanks for sharing!
Glad you enjoyed it!
why am I so happy to see this thing brought back to life
it's like watching ER doctor do a series of procedure to save a dying patient
Gosh this was a joy to watch.
I have a G3 project on the horizon needed the analog board recapped. I’m experienced with soldering so it doesn’t worry me, but this video definitely reignited the itch to get in and do it
Thank you so much! They’re such fun projects. Getting them working again is the best feeling.
Very nice video. Just goes to further show that no aluminum electrolytic capacitor has eternal life, not even on a sealed and never-used machine. I must say I did grimace when I saw that paper speaker get dunked in IPA, but it certainly was a relief to see it works fine after drying. Also very interesting to see just how many components need replacing, above and beyond just the capacitors. Your video does a long way to warn people who buy sealed computers that they still probably need repair work, and such would need to be factored into the cost of the machine. No doubt you paid a pretty penny for that sealed Classic. But it certainly is lovely to behold, and now that it's working, I know it means something very special to you. It would to me. Thanks for sharing!
Wow I am impressed and it was so entertaining to watch it being restored into Mac Classic from start to finish. And the length was not long or shot. Beautifully edited.
Thanks so much!
I'm glad this was in the right hands. Thank you for the great video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
The process of opening up the box of a new computer for the first time when computers were something rather special in the home (not rare, but far from ubiquitous, unlike today), the excitement at seeing the new model up close and personal and giddily knowing that it's YOURS; I miss that. That Mac looks imacculate inside, the PCBs and chips looking brand spanking new. That cruelly created the illusion that it was going to fire up first time! Great work getting it back up and running.
very cool find Matt!
awesome quality video editing.
I will subscribe!
Glad you enjoyed it and thanks so much for the sub!
Great vid! I have a Classic II that one day I'll have to recap as well when i get comfortable enough to do it. Speaker's starting to distort and the display had lines during boot randomly. Fun times await
Loved the video and definitely shared the excitement in the unboxing. The black gloves were a little overkill but that's just me me.
Thank you for the synthwave soundtrack! Gave me all the feels!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Didn’t realize you were the thinkpad 701c guy until after I finished this! Bravo to your work preserving those amazing laptops, and this Classic too! You’ve got great skills and I hope you keep making videos. Would love to have voiceovers too if you’re up to it.
Thanks so much - yeah, I've definitely done a deep dive on the 701c line but I liked the idea of using this format to show some of the other things I do as well. Glad you enjoyed it!
This was such a lovely, relaxing, beautifully-made video. Thank you for sharing this, and congrats on your incredible new Classic!
Thank you so much!
Nice work, man. Subscribed. The no-talking approach is reminiscent of Primitive Technology’s vids, but with background music instead of chirping birds and other woodsy sounds. That said, you’ve got a good speaking voice, so narrating as you go would certainly work.
My first Mac was a Classic II, which I bought in 1992. I still remember the nerdy excitement I felt when I unboxed it. 🤓
Glad you enjoyed it and thanks so much for the sub! And yeah - so much nerdy excitement unboxing this one.
You could get some Pantone colors for us. Most seem to remember it in a beige ish color. While I remember it more as a broken white/grey color.
Well done. Nicely restored to working conditions. 👍🏻👍🏻
So awesome to see that original gray instead of the oxidized yellow color unsealed ones become.
And to see that boot screen after all your effort, a thing of such beauty and boot speed.
Great video! Thanks for making it! In case it isn't mentioned, the power board outputs very high voltages, so I was a little stressed out when you just had it powered on the bench like that. There is a big resistor that you can remove one leg of to make sure power doesn't go to the high voltage parts of the board. I don't remember which one of the top of my head, I think it's one of the blue ones maybe, but Adrian's Digital Basement has a video where he shows this. If it were me I'd also verify in the schematics. The thing about high voltage is that, depending on the voltage and materials, your gloves might not actually be enough insulation and it could just right through. So this is a serious danger here! Also, that voltage could jump through the air and fry components on your motherboard (logic board) even if it isn't touching it. I went back and checked but I couldn't tell if you actually disabled the high voltage. But I hope that in the future you will if you aren't already! Work safely!
Also... you left the battery in while submersing the board. It's probably okay but not the best idea as it could short something out.
Hey, thanks so much! I didn't know about the resistor trick - I'll definitely have to check that out, and as far as the battery - I actually caught that as I was doing it :D. If you watch the video, the very next clip the battery is removed and sitting on the side of the IPA bath. The good thing was that I was using 99% but still a chance that you don't need to take! Glad you enjoyed the video.
I am speechless and proud to see your work. Growing up around the Mac is one of those life-long tools I enjoyed making a living with.
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed the video. It was such a fun project for me to work on. This was one of the first computers I owned that was “my” computer growing up.
Great job, you did this little machine a good turn with care and precision. Great to see it's in good hands. Incredible to see it in original condition like this.
Nice, although I was concerned about dunking the speaker in IPA, and powering up the power supply with the ultor cap disconnected, You had it awfully close to the neck board 13:54, if it did fire up I would expect a large arc and possible damage.
This does show the downside of computers, assuming nothing is wrong, it is all but totally useless these days (for it's original intended use)
I commend you for the use of chip quick for the removal of the SMT caps. It really minimizes the possibility of damaging the PCB.😊
Holy... this video is so impressive!
Hey thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed it.
Nice unboxing! sadly it didn't work out of the box, but it does now
Another sign I am old…these were the computers I used in college on 90s…pretty cool 😎
Thank you for buying this and showing us
Thanks for watching! Was a really fun project.
This actually humbled me. I was *_sure_* it was gonna boot, because in my experience leaky caps from the '80s/'90s are normally from years of hot running. But you called it, man!
I’m right there with you. I honestly thought the caps would be fine but was super worried about the battery!
First video ive seen of yours, but quite impressed! Well done sir
Hey thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed it and got a lot of fun projects coming up :)
When I was attending Uni in the early 90's I remember there was a student in my maths class always carry his Macintosh Classic into the lecture theatre just like what they do with laptops nowadays. Thanks for the fond memories.
Thats amazing - my first exposure to these was in grade school. We had an entire lab of Apple II systems and one day we got a couple compact macs. Everyone fought over getting a seat at one. I love the nostalgia something like this brings back for people. Glad you enjoyed watching!
What an amazing video! I've never owned a Classic Mac but used Commodore C64 and Amiga back in the day. I find videos like this quite moving that people are still loving these old machines and giving them a new lease on life. Seeing this brand new (old stock) Mac being unboxed was quite special!!
Also I am wondering if you could let me know where you sourced the music from. Amazing stuff! :D
Glad you enjoyed it! And I use Epidemic Sound to source/license the music in my videos.
You are amazing !!!!! Back to 90!!!!
Brings back my memories of when I opened my Mac Classic. I loved playing Apache Strike on it.
Great game!
Wow, a future proofed mint condition machine. Great video
great video, you did a fantastic job with this Apple Classic.
Glad you liked it!
This video lession me that "Never Give up" your hardwork. Excellent. 👍
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed it.
Your most welcome@@polymatt
Man I’m glad you found one brand new and you were able to fix it and get it working. I remember playing the Oregon Trail on one of them machines. Man brought back some memories. Good job on getting this piece of history running again. 👍
Yes! For me it was Carmen Sandiego and HyperCard. Glad you enjoyed it!
Beautiful! Good job man.
I'm so glad I randomly stumbled upon this video...simply amazing video thank you so much for going into detail and showing your skills. When the chime came in and the monitor turned on I was like YASSS! lol!
Really glad you enjoyed it! I know I was super happy when that thing finally chimed and I saw the screen slowly come to life!
Accidentally found your video. Very informative and interesting. You are awesome❤
Fantastic job!
Amazing ❤️ seeing that brand new, crisp monochrome CRT come to life 👍
Fantastic video! I miss my old mac classic
It's so CLEAN. I have always thought the Classic was such a pleasing and complete design.
Same, I always loved the super compact design. My first time dialing up to a BBS was on one of these and whenever I see one, I associate it with the "soothing" sounds of dialup. Was a magical experience back in the day.
Running the analog and logic boards out of the case like that is risky business. Disconnecting the yoke doesn't remove B+ from the flyback in that model, so if both boards are working you have horizontal drive and the HV will come up! That loose anode cap could arc to the logic board and blow something up, or arc to you and stand your hair on end. It wouldn't kill you but it won't feel good. Without the yoke the deflection circuit is not tuned and you can blow the horizontal output transistor.
Better to leave the logic board out of it and check voltages on the plug. They should be stable without the logic board, and you're guaranteed to have no HV.
Great advice. Im always “careful” but always open to reducing risk.
I too have a boxed Classic Mac but opened it 10 years ago, now its a Mac Classic II inside with upgraded 68882 FPU upgrade and bluescsi 32GB
That is straight out of the 90s for me. My high school had a lab of Mac SE30's and Classics, that we used every day. The nostalgia is almost overwhelming.
Same. This one brought back so many memories.
This was awesome. I used the Mac classic in high school for some coding in basic. took me back to some good times :)
Nice! Glad you enjoyed it!
Amazing job! What an amazing work!
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed it.
Taking it apart and checking before powering on was an EXTREMELY good decidion.
Cool video! My dad had one of those when I was young. He wrote textbooks for schools on it. 10 inch greyscale monitor and one button mouse was news to me. Friends dad had PCs with 256 color monitors at 14 inch. And gaming support was lacking. At first he didn’t even have dial up internet on it. But it had Microsoft Office 6 I believe and internet explorer on it. 😁