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Anyone tried to make a card slot mod, yet?

Started by spenoza, 09/19/2007, 11:47 AM

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spenoza

And by asking, I reveal that I don't know how difficult it would be. I know the card slot pins go all over the place in the system, but would there be any way to install a switch (either electrical or mechanical) to allow you to select between PCE and TG-16 games? Maybe route all the pins through a switch box and the switch one way routes them all one direction, the switch in the other routes them the other way?

Is this within the realm of possibility?

D-Lite

 :-s

You mean a way to switch between different region HuCards, yes?

Look one thread down  :wink:
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spenoza

I thought those boards still required some kind of diving board adapter. I am incorrect, then?

D-Lite

Quote from: guest on 09/19/2007, 12:08 PMI thought those boards still required some kind of diving board adapter. I am incorrect, then?
Nope, any "region mod(ification)" is actually a hardware mod of the HuCard slot itself.  With a mechanical 8PDT switch, there is no PCB, with the PCB you also use a small SPDT switch.  So you need no further adapter  :)
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spenoza

Does it also take care of the region check US games make?

D-Lite

Quote from: guest on 09/19/2007, 05:07 PMDoes it also take care of the region check US games make?
No, because it's the Japanese systems that run that check  :mrgreen:

For US systems, the PCB or switch is good enough.  For Japanese systems, you need to ground pin #29 on the 6280 as noted in that thread.
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spenoza

OK. Well, I should have read deeper into the other thread. My bad. I can buy the PCB, install it (or scream for help installing it), and ground that pin and all Japanese and US games will play fine with the flip of a switch.

Damn fine. Now I'm even happier I have a PCE Core.

termis

You can use either the PCB or a 8PDT switch.  Using the PCB is the more "elegant" solution (allows you to use any style switch), and the 8PDT is the more "direct" solution (no need for ICs/PCBs).

This is one of my own:
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And here's one that (I think) D-Lite did.
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Searching through the threads here will give methods to do it any one of these.  If you have a grasp of some electronics & soldering, you should be able to do it.

spenoza

That, I think, is the problem. I have a soldering iron but I've no real experience using it.

Turbo D

its not too hard, My first job was moding my ps2. Now that was hard, lol.
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spenoza

I imagine installing an 8PDT would be a more complicated job. But then, I have never drilled a hole in a case with the intent of it looking nice, either.

grahf

Ive always said making the hole for the switch was the hardest part. Soldering the wires for the pins is easy, just VERY time consuming. Well, I suppose its not easy if your using a shitty soldering iron. But with decent equipment its easy.

spenoza

Is a 15 watt from Radio Shack a crappy one? It sure was cheap. How well do those little cordless ones work? The ones that stay cool because they're only hot for 5 seconds or somesuch.

grahf

For the $15 (i think thats what those cost) the radioshack irons are not terrible, but they're too bulky for most things. Not to mention weak. Not really ideal for console work. Since you dont really know where to start, I would reccomend you pick up one of these:
http://circuitspecialists.com/prod.itml/icOid/6438

Its not top of the line, but its certainly worth the $39.99 they charge for it. Light years better than a radio shack iron for not much more. Comes with a .5mm tip as well, so its great for console stuff. The tips are fairly high quality as well, and generally last forever (maintain their point) under occasional use.

termis

Quote from: guest on 09/23/2007, 09:55 AMI imagine installing an 8PDT would be a more complicated job. But then, I have never drilled a hole in a case with the intent of it looking nice, either.
If you already have a prepared PCB, it probably won't make that much difference either way, though you'll need to wire more points on with the PCB method. 

If you don't have a prepared PCB, then making your own & installing that will make it a quite a bit more complicated than installing just the 8PDT switch.

It'll be much easier to make it look "nice" with the PCB method, as the 8PDT switch selection is extremely limited.

spenoza


grahf

Quote from: guest on 09/28/2007, 12:33 PMGrahf, do you think something like http://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=10051&langId=-1&catalogId=10053&productId=100487598&N=10000003+501083+90401&marketID=90401&locStoreNum=8125 or a Cold Heat iron would be appropriate to use?
No, the weller you linked too is a little underpowered for the job. I've never used one of them cold heat irons, but Ive heard they best on bigger stuff.. wouldnt try it on a PCE.

Turbo D

You can get something cheap like this http://shop2.outpost.com/product/2258018 I had bought a cheap one from them at the location next to my house. It worked good for about a half hour, then the tip kinda melted away, lol. Oh well, I was already done with the job, haha.
Quote from: MissaFX on 01/06/2008, 12:10 PMMy idea of gaming is a couple of friends over, a couple of drinks, a couple of medical-handrolled-game-enhancing-cigs and a glowing box you all worship.
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