Figure 6 Lisa/Mac XL power supplies
external views. 1.8-A Lisa 2/10 to Mac XL power supply (left), and 1.2-A
Lisa 2/5 power supply (right) are both marked "l 5OW," but the
1.2A model is actually a dual voltage model, and it's 50% stronger!
x 1.8 A = 216 W (44% over specification). Substituting Lisa 2/5 power supply
values: 120 V AC x 1.2 A - 144 W (4% under specification).
So how can both models be marked 150 W? The acceptable input voltage specified
in the Lisa 2 literature is 90 V AC to 130 V AC. Substituting 90 V AC (the
low limit) into the Lisa 2/10 to Mac XL supply's formula (90 V AC x 1.8
A) lowers its relatively high rating to 162 W. Substituting 130 V AC (the
high limit) into the Lisa supply's formula (130 V AC x 1.2 A) raises its
relatively low rating to 156 W. Since both figures exceed 150 W, that presumably
explains the identical ratings. Nevertheless, the Lisa 2/10 to Mac XL supply
is notably superior.
When the original 1 .2-A Lisa 2/5 supply is used with an internal hard drive
and a Macintosh XL Screen Kit (described at the end of this chapter), audible
transformer ringing results, horizontal retrace lines become noticeable,
and a slight screen flicker is introduced. Installing the 1 .8-A Lisa 2/10
to Mac XL supply eliminates all of that.
The 1.8-A Lisa 2/10 to MacXL supply is also a dual voltage model. 110 to
220-V AC conversion is made by moving two jumpers at the bottom of the board,
as shown in Figure 7.
These differences make a very important point. If you only remember one
thing from this: Always confirm specifications by making your own calculations.
Figure 7 Lisa 2/10 to Mac XL power
supply-1 10- to 220-V AC conversion (1.8 A model only) is made by moving
two jumpers at the bottom of the circuit board.
The card cage is a removable rack for the Lisa's circuit cards. It's also
held by tight-fitting tongue and socket connectors. To remove it, disconnect
all peripheral cables from the back of the