Alright, so after putting off my NC2000e until I can give it some more attention, I have bought another from the series-a DCS 420c.
This one came to me with a 160gb hard drive, which I installed for testing.
When I unboxed it, I plugged it in and got the all segments lit/clicking inside that my other does when plugged in, so I took that as a good sign.
Pulling the bottom off showed me some corrosion on the battery pigtail, but i was able to get it out without damaging the connector on the board. Plugging a fresh pigtail in here showed me 14.4v across the terminals, which seemed good(my NC2000e only shows like 7V here).
So, encouraged, I tried connecting an 8x AAA pack I have made up. At first it seemed like everything was working as it should. When I flipped on the power switch on the camera, the hard drive started spinning up, the LEDs flashed on the back, and the LCD started making some sense. That was short lived, though, as very quickly I saw a wisp of smoke come out the bottom so I shut the whole mess down.
I double checked my battery pack wiring, plugged it all in again, and the next thing I knew I had pops and a lot of smoke out the back.
As of now, I get no signs of life whatsoever-no LCD segments or anything else.
When I plug in the wall plug, I get 14V still across the battery terminals(no battery connected). If I connect a bench PSU to the battery pigtail(no power adapter connected) something is drawing ~100mA but I can't see any life from anything.
Totally disconnected from the back, the N90s seemingly works perfectly. At the shutter opens and closes, the camera meters and AFs, etc.
Any idea what could be going on here, and what I might have smoked in this process?
Also, I tried to dig deeper into the mainboard of my NC2000e but got stuck on it. I was able to get the PCMCIA cage out, but it seemed the standoffs for the SCSI port may have been holding it down. Any ideas for those without making a mess(if that is the problem)? The seem deeply recessed enough in the plastic that I wasn't able to get a nut driver on them, or really even just grab them with pliers and turn as I've been known to do before removing them on computer expansion cards.