A while back, I turned my Lisa 2/10 off and removed its rear panel to access the card cage and swap around a few memory boards for testing purposes. I had one of James D's awesome RS232 WiFi Wireless Modems attached to the Serial B port, and left the modem's USB power cord plugged in while I removed the Lisa's rear panel (I know, I know... not smart).
Before I removed the modem and took out the card cage, I laid the rear panel down flat behind the Lisa. I clumsily bumped into it and pushed the panel with its metal shielding underneath the RS232 WiFi Wireless Modem, which contacted the modem's exposed PCB solder joints - while it still had USB power. Tiny sparks and an unpleasant "shhhh" sound for a brief moment before I quickly slid the rear panel back out from underneath the modem. Yikes.
I figured the RS232 WiFi Wireless Modem was toast and decided it's best
not trying to use it again. Its replacement arrived and now I find that the Serial B port does not seem to communicate with the new replacement modem, so the Lisa has likely been damaged as well. The Serial A port was
not affected and continues to work as normal.
LisaTerminal commands will not register when the modem is connected to Serial B, but they do when connected to Serial A.
Symptom: LisaTerminal does not seem to be communicating with the modem over Serial B anymore. I can type, hit return and the cursor just jumps back to the beginning of the line.
Questions: Am I likely to have damaged the motherboard, the I/O board, or both? Might there be a way to repair the damage in any case?