kalleboo's retro tech blog

PowerBook 540c

Buying it & First Boot

Another Yahoo! Auctions find. I was looking out for a 68K color PowerBook with video out. My choices were between the 540c and the 190. Due to the display plague affecting most of the 90's PowerBooks sold on Y!A, I had my eye on a good 190 with a bad display and a dead 5300 with a good display with a plan to combine the parts into something working, but then this one came up. The only problem it had was a missing display hinge plate, which seems to be a weak point on these machines.

Booting it up for the first time, it came right up, and had 7.5.5-J installed on it. All the apps had been deleted, but the system folder had traces of MIDI software.

Initial setup: Using Target Disk Mode, a SCSI CD-ROM and Built-in Ethernet

The first thing I did was connect the machine over SCSI target disk mode to my PowerBook G3 and image the harddisk it came with, in case there were any gems in there that turned out to be important later.



The next step was booting off an external SCSI CD-ROM drive with a System 7.5 CD-ROM, wiping the drive (takes 20 minutes for HD SC Setup to re-format a 500 MB drive!) and doing a clean install of 7.5.

One nice feature of the 540c is built-in Ethernet. SCSI target disk mode is handy when you need it, but since SCSI isn't hot-swap, continually rebooting devices to copy files is a PITA. So the first thing I did after the clean install was done was set up EtherTalk so I could copy files straight over the LAN. The built-in Ethernet on the 540c seems to max out at about 1.5 Mbit (using AppleShare, downloading a file in Netscape is even slower).

It was really nice having an Ethernet LAN of 3 major generations of PowerBooks right next to each other! My G4 Quicksilver also joined in on the fun over WiFi from my office

 

Once I had confirmed the machine was working well, I started ordering some other parts...

Upgrading: SD PowerMonster SCSI2SD

The first was replacing the built-in SCSI HDD with a SCSI2SD. The built-in drive was working, but whining pretty loudly, and it may be my imagination it the whine seemed to get louder the longer I used it. In addition, having more storage space than 500 MB available is always nice!

The SCSI2SD I got was a domestically-produced one called the SD PowerMonster by Stratos Technology. They're no longer available from the original producer's online store, but they still sell them at the original price on Yahoo Auctions.

I configured the drive to appear as a Seagate drive that's natively supported by an unpatched version of Apple's HD SC Setup to keep setup simple. Then I opened up the machine and installed it, and rebooted off the external 7.5 installer CD-ROM. The machine came right up, and HD SC Setup happily formatted it. HD SC Setup took 40 minutes to format the 2 GB drive! I was worried it was hung, but the cursor was still spinning. Since the Seagate drive I was masquerading as was a 20 MB device, the default partition size was 20 MB, and I had to use the partition tool to remove that partition and create a new, 2 GB one. I then had to reformat that partition again in the Finder (took seconds) otherwise it the installer would error out.

One thing I learned was that the SCSI2SD does not work with SCSI Target disk mode. The PowerBook screensaver goes on showing SCSI ID 2, but the Mac it's connected to shows a SCSI device on ID 0, and refuses to mount it (the Mac I connected to was an IDE Mac so there was no ID conflict). Not really surprising, but worth noting anyway.

I ran a quick benchmark on the original HDD before removing it and compared to the SCSI2SD. The SCSI2SD was actually slower! Could it be the SD card? I just used a spare one I had laying around (Toshiba SD-L032G4 class 4). This SCSI2SD is also based on a pre-v6 version (going by the firmware), and supposedly there was a big performance boost in v6.

IBM DHAS-2540 S640 HDD Benchmark (B's Bench)


SD PowerMonster SCSI2SD Benchmark (B's Bench)

New PRAM/Backup battery

The PowerBook was also not keeping time when it was unplugged, which pointed to a dead PRAM battery. The PowerBooks have a rechargeable backup battery which also keeps the RAM alive when you swap batteries. There's a guy on Yahoo! Auctions who builds new PowerBook batteries of any generation on demand, and while I could do it myself like I did for the G3, this time I was lazy and just ordered one.

To install the backup battery you need to bascially take the whole machine apart, so I did it at the same time as I installed the SCSI2SD

UPDATE: 2020-04-25 After a couple months, the machine is no longer keeping time or PRAM settings. Reading online, there is speculation the machine only recharges the PRAM battery once the main battery is full. And since I don't have a working main battery...

Display issue & repair

On the second day of using the machine, my heart sunk as intereference patterns, jitter and noise appeared on the display. The severity came and went, but it remained.

Reading an unrelated thread on the 68kmla forum, there was a throwaway comment about someone squeezing the bottom left corner of their display stopping the issue, and sure enough, it worked for me too!

I then took the display apart and reseated the connector in that spot.

Spare machine for front plate/RAM

So my machine was missing the front plate... And they're not exactly easy to come by separately. So on my birthday, there was another 540c auction on Yahoo ending, advertised as "not working". Well, it cost more than my original machine, but I was kind of drunk, so I got it.

Well it showed up, and I got my front plate. Also, it turns out the "not working" was just the power supply. Not only did the machine, 2.5" SCSI harddisk and all work with my other power supply, but it had a 32 MB RAM card in it! So now my machine also has a 36 MB RAM card.

PowerBook PCMCIA Expansion Module Rev. C

Oh yeah, I got one!

So, PowerBook 500 series card cages have shown up on Y!A about every 3-6 months or so. One Rev C went for around 13,000 yen, then a Rev B went for 7,500 yen. Maybe there was something wrong with my alerts, but I didn't see any at all come up on international eBay during the same time period. Another Rev C showed up on Y!A, and I figured "It's time" and nabbed it for 15,000 yen

It showed up, I booted up System 7.5.5, installed PC Card Software 2.0, and plugged it in (tight fit!). Inserted an SD to PCMCIA card adapter and... success! It works! Very handy, because this is a very quick way to transfer large files like CD-ROM disk images from a modern Mac.

One thing I love about this PCMCIA card cage is how this was back when Apple was still obsesses with software eject. Drag your card to the trash and... boing! It pops out! This feature was removed by the time my PowerBook G3 was made.

For more on PCMCIA cards I've used, see the PCMCIA peripherals page

Wi-Fi

The reason the Rev C module is so coveted is that it's the only revision that can use Wi-Fi cards. This is also the reason I got one.

First I tried getting it going in System 7.5.5 using classic networking, but despite trying both a Buffalo/Melco card and an Orinoco Proxim card with their correct drivers, I just got an error when selecting "Alternate Ethernet". I need to figure out how to get this working, I will probably install Open Transport.

I also installed MacOS 8.1 for HFS+ support so I could easily transfer files from a modern Mac running Catalina, so I gave that a go, and installing the WaveLan drivers in there, it works! I'm online!

Having Wi-Fi on this machine really feels like a game-changer. Yes, before I also got it on Wi-Fi using an Ethernet transciever and a Wi-Fi travel router in converter mode, but that added a pile of cables and was always a bit of a faff of a set-up. I've started using this machine just casually lounging in bed a lot more since I got PCMCIA Wi-Fi working.

USB-C Power Cord

It turn out it's pretty easy to power the PowerBook 540c off of any decent modern USB-C power supply! This means even without a working battery, I can just use a standard USB-C laptop power bank!

Read more in the full article about the PowerBook 540c USB-C power cable

Work yet to be done

Last updated: 2021.3.22
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