I am referring to that connector, yes. I was noticing problems with my power switch not working, keyboard having issues, etc, and narrowed it down to that connector.
To be more specific, many of the metal pins in that connector have lost their "springiness". Some have fallen completely out of the connector body, and at the end of each of these pins, there's a blue mound of corrosion. Removing the plastic back of the connector (that crimps the ribbon cables in place) revealed more blue corrosion.
I think, unfortunately, that the battery damage in this Lisa was so severe that it damaged this connector too, and the pins I'm seeing that are falling out are actually broken off, having been eaten away
. In retrospect, this connector being unreliable explains a lot of the intermittent issues I've had with testing various boards, so I'm at least happy to have found the culprit.
For the short term, I have a spare harness from another Lisa body that I can swap in, but eventually, I'd like to find a more permanent replacement. A quick and dirty "solution", of course, would be to use any 60 pin connector that fits and to solder some ribbon cables directly to it, but I'd like to avoid that route. That link you sent seems like it would work, so maybe I'll give that a shot - thanks!