The Analogue Turbo Duo clone shipped in time for Christmas 2023. Are you happy with yours ?? Find firmware updates here.
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Messages - StriderSubzero

#1
Turns out it was the fuse again actually. Guess I blew it switching the power on and off with my testing.
#2
Hi,

I have a PC Engine that would not power on, so I replaced the fuse. It then worked fine.

I then made an AV cable following this tutorial: http://www.cgquarterly.com/2010/04/26/building-a-turbografx-16-pc-engine-composite-av-cable/

It worked, then I unplugged the cables in order to heatshrink them (I had them bare before), and then when I plugged them back in, the PC Engine is no longer outputting anything, even through RF. Is it possible I shorted something?

I double-checked my AC adapter with a multimeter and it's fine. I opened it again and the fuse is fine.

If anyone has any ideas please let me know. I'm so frustrated. Thank you.
#3
Okay, weirdly, the AC adapter seems to have crapped out at some point as well, so I hooked up a new one.

It didn't work at first, so I left it on and walked away for awhile. When I came back, it was playing. Now it appears to be working. ???

Thanks everyone.
#4
Okay, I replaced the fuse with a 1A 250v pigtail fuse I got from eBay. No luck. I measured across the voltage regulator and it appears to be fine.

The fuse I took out is definitely fried though, it's black on the bottom and there's no continuity across it. There is continuity across the new one; I checked it.

I tried the RF and and AV like before. I'm getting nothing. Extremely frustrated.
#5
Quote from: mickcris on 04/12/2017, 06:22 PMwere you tuning into channel 95 or 96?  The Genesis 1 cable is correct.
Thanks for your help. I tried all the channels in the 90s, as well as everything below that.

Quoteyou can check power by measuring at the voltage regulator inside the console.  output pin would be 5v.
I will test the voltage regulator once I find it and update back.

As another update, I took it apart and tested the fuse. My multimeter shot quickly up to around 22 (ohms I guess?) and then fell back to "0.L." The fuse itself looks maybe a little bit cloudy?
It's very hard to get to as it's under some type of metal structure and beside another component. It's a glass cylinder like a normal fuse, which somewhat surprised me, because all the fuses in video game stuff I've messed with before were a tiny cylinder on 2 long leads. Pico I think that's called?

This is a 1 amp fuse, correct? I wasn't able to find a tutorial or much info online about replacing this fuse. Is there some trick to it? There's not much room as it's under and beside other tight components.
#6
I don't have it in front of me but the polarity matched as I recall. I also tried a generic power adapter and I know the polarity matched on that, but it also didn't work.
#7
I bought a PC-Engine (the standard white one) on eBay and the seller claimed that it worked fine. It didn't come with an AC adapter so I used the Genesis model 1 adapter, as it seems compatible. However, I'm not able to get any response from it over RF or by stripping an AV cable and matching it up using the pin schematic I see online. Since there's no LED, I'm not able to tell if it's even getting power. What should I check to verify it's getting power?