PowerBook 165c


History

Introduced: February 10, 1993

Discontinued: December 13, 1993

Original Retail Price: $3,400

Model #: M6498

Tech Specs

Display: 8.9" passive-matrix color LCD

Processor: 33 MHz Motorola 68030

RAM: 12 MB (upgraded)

Hard Drive: 16 GB SSD (upgraded)

Floppy Drive: 1.44 MB

OS: System 7.1


Condition & Notes

This unit is in mint condition, and was inherited from a family member (the original owner) who used it for a number of years in the 1990s as an administrative assistant at Tandem Computer. It has the original power adapter, an extra battery, and an external battery charger, as well as a Kensington-branded carrying case. This unit is equipped with the optional modem card, as well as an aftermarket 4MB expansion module.

This was the first Mac laptop with a color screen! The PowerBook 165c has a similar outward appearance to other PowerBooks of the time, such as the 160 and the 165, but is notable in that it supports 8-bit color on both the internal LCD as well as through external video output (hence the ‘c’ appended to the nameplate).

In 2024 I replaced the original 120 MB hard disk drive with a BlueSCSI v2 solid-state device. In addition to the benefits of greater storage capacity, speed, quietness, and reliability, the BlueSCSI uses a micro SD card which enables much easier transferral of software and files between modern computers and the vintage Mac.

It is functionally and cosmetically flawless with all-original parts, and is currently running System 7.1.


 Case & Accessories

 
IMG_4042.jpeg
IMG_4039.jpeg
IMG_4047.jpeg
 

PowerBook

 
IMG_4061.jpeg
IMG_4071.jpeg
IMG_4067.jpeg
IMG_4080.jpeg
IMG_4064.jpeg
IMG_4098.jpeg
IMG_4099.jpeg
 
 
IMG_4092.jpeg
 

 System Specs

 
 

BlueSCSI v2 SSD

 

This is the PowerBook version of the BlueSCSI v2 solid-state hard drive device. It slots right in where the original 120 MB HDD was originally installed.

In addition to the benefits of greater storage capacity, speed, quietness, and reliability, the BlueSCSI uses a micro SD card which enables much easier transferral of software and files between modern computers and the vintage Mac.

 

Teardown/Disassembly Photos

 

Top view of lower chassis, with selected components outlined and labeled - note presence of aftermarket 4MB memory expansion

Daughterboard containing factory 8MB RAM (left) and ROMs (right)

Close-up of modem card; these were an optional upgrade on the PowerBook 165c

Oblique view of lower chassis, showing rear ports (including video port, which protrudes from the processor board above the audio jacks)

Aftermarket RAM expansion daughterboard, here populated with 4MB

Close-up of processor daughterboard, with RAM/ROM and RAM upgrade daughterboards removed

 
 

Top view of upper chassis, with selected components labeled

 

 Bonus Mac Zone Magazine

from late 1997

 
IMG_4058.jpeg
 
 
IMG_4049.jpeg
IMG_4053.jpeg
IMG_4056.jpeg
IMG_4052.jpeg
IMG_4054.jpeg