>>
>>This just a wild guess, I would suspect the power supply.
>>A voltmeter would be handy to measure the voltages before and after the pop
>>that makes it work.
>>
>>  
>>
>Hi Liam
>Any luck? If you find the power supply at fault and have trouble finding 
>a replacement board drop me a line.
>
>Darren
>Melb/Oz

Thank you to all who responded. 

I am not familiar with repairing classic Macs - I don't have a problem 
inserting/replacing memory, hard drives or the logic board but I feel 
uncomfortable, being without any prior experience, replacing the power 
supply with the soldered wires, risk of electrical shock and all and I'm 
not even sure what to look for to see whether the power supply is broken. 
Taking it to a Macintosh service centre would be too expensive (if they 
would repair it at all).

So I'm not quite sure what to do with it then - I'd prefer a computer 
that works all the time (instead of when the computer wants to). 

I might sell/give away this one as spare parts and get another Mac 
(perhaps an SE) to replace it.

---
Liam Hatton
Perth, Australia

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