I'm "helping" someone over on 68kmla with their Lisa --- signs point to a problem on the CPU board, perhaps in the MMU, since the problem happens very soon after power-up or reset. We'd like to get in and probe a bit, which of course is pretty hard to do without extenders or other clever tools.
Since the boot process failure happens so soon (or maybe the Lisa isn't even running the ROM code at all), the thought is that the I/O board isn't even really a factor yet --- the CPU might be giving up after trying to write to the MMU registers and failing. This means that we could learn a lot by probing if we could only get the Lisa running without the I/O board in the computer at all.
As discussed in
this recent thread, you can force the Lisa on by shorting +5V STBY to ON. The discussion is about how to do that with the I/O board in, but those signals are on the I/O board connector, and you could easily short them while the I/O board is out of the computer.
Is this safe? If so, would the Lisa at least try to start executing the boot ROM in this state? (For example, I was worried that you might need to pull up \NMI, but it seems that both the I/O board and the CPU board have \NMI pull-ups.)