Awesome repair. You have the patience of a saint. Your soldering has gotten so much better since you started. I can really see the confidence you have now as you develop that muscle memory. Great job. It always feels good to fix something!
Thanks man. I can definitely see my skills have improved, especially when I revisit my earlier projects. It's pretty funny to see the difference. Thanks for the continued support!
Ah yes, gotta love the sight of broken traces from mechanical fatigue! In all seriousness, I can see this problem being both time consuming and annoying to deal with. So well done!
It seems like this was actually due to improper installation of the cartridge port.. they didn't fully seat it and the force of pushing in the cartridge was subjected to the PINs only, when it should have been fully mounted to the mainboard...
I sent you an email a while back thanking you for spreading knowledge like this. Its far more inspiring and far more helpful to have that dialog during the video and than videos where it’s just 3x speed with no guidance. It’s cool if that what someone likes but that’s just “repair porn” to me. You fucking rock man, and thanks again for the content.
Wow thanks for the kind words man, I appreciate it and it's viewers like you that make sharing this hobby worthwhile. I enjoy all sorts of repair and restoration content myself and there are many great creators out there, each with their own style. I think my repair journey resonates with some viewers more than others because I had no idea what I was doing when I started and slowly improved with each repair. Folks that are beginners or on the fence about taking up this hobby can relate to someone who started out a similar way (compared to someone that does this for a living). In any case, glad you enjoy the content this much and thank you again for the support.
This is the most work extensive repair I have seen you do I am very impressed with your patience. And I'm shocked that this happened to this Master system they are very good consoles that last for a very long time I'm pretty sure somebody drop it a few times
I appreciate it bud. My soldering has come quite some way over the past couple of years and repairs like this feel more approachable. Most importantly I am enjoying it more than ever.
Pretty sure the factory soldered the cartridge connector when it wasn’t fully inserted through the through holes. This meant there was a gap between the connector housing and the top of the PCB. Inserting a game would push the connector down, stressing the solder connections and traces until they finally gave. Suddenly the gap was gone, but the traces were ruined. :(
That was my thought immediately. The only question I had after this is - was the connector fully through after the repair? I'd be worried about the potential for a repeat of this issue in the future.
@@EvilAng3la My thought as well. At least he added thin wires, which can take some bending. Just soldering across cracked traces is really weak (based on my experience).
This was a terrific tutorial. A great learning experience having worked with repairing traces before. You are very thorough, logical and organized. Honestly I was cheering you on every step of the way and thrilled that it worked! Superb video and congrats!
Nice work! I was wondering what on earth the previous owner had done to the machine to break all those traces, but someone very nicely explained what probably happened due to a factory error that broke over time. It was great to see you doing that extensive patch-wire work, hopefully I learned something for the future. Thank you for sharing!
Each time you insert and remove the cartridge, those pins will move a little bit. Over time the mechanical stress will break them, no matter how careful you are with it.
Great job, great to see a lovely old Master System saved. This was my first console, it has a lot of great RPG's, arcade conversions, and Alex Kidd of course.
Yes indeed, happy to have got it working! I do enjoy the library of SMS games even as an adult on emulation. Part of that is nostalgia with the few games I owned but its fun to discover all the games I wasn't aware of too.
I literally said "that brings back memories" seconds before you said exactly the same. As I remember Bubble Bobble on the Master System was one of the better conversions due to all the extra levels. Oh the amount of hours and late nights doing two player and trying to find all the secrets in it was probably the most me and my wife ever put into one game together. I even made my own controller for it from an old speaker enclosure and parts from an old broken Jump Bug cocktail arcade machine.
That game brings back memories. I was broke so had to hire a Sega console from the video store. This game was/is addictive. Great repair and soldering skills. Classic! Thanks 😉
That amount of traces to repair is a real pain in the rear, so it must have been very rewarding to have the work pay off. I do like that bent tip on the iron too. Good job, mate.
Wow, that must have been tedious! I happen to have a Master System in my possession that has this same symptom. I never got around to diagnosing it, but I have a feeling that you may have just done it for me, hehe. Looking at the tear down, this may also explain why Genesis consoles have a small plastic brace underneath the cart slot and held by the cartridge screws. I’m gonna guess that over time, the pressure of inserting cartridges flexed the board and damaged the traces over time. Looks like Sega may have been aware of this and learned from their mistake for the Genesis. Great video man!
FYI you can buy reels of enamel wire in any gauge you need. I’ve used enamel wire in phone and computer board repairs. Nice thing about enamel wire is that the wires can be near other contacts and won’t short.
I watch so many videos like this, I constantly think I could do that, it's easy! While I could do it I know it's not easy and I'd probably spend more time trying to make it look perfect only to make it look worse lol. Great job, I really need to get into more work like this to get my skills up where my mind likes to think they are.
Haha, if you enjoy it keep at it. I'm no expert, could barely swap a component out a couple of years ago. But its a hobby I enjoy so I continue to improve with each repair.
I had a master system plus when I was a kid and loved it dearly. I believe it's still in its box at my mother's house. I spent more hours than I can count playing games like moonwalker, ghost busters, galaxy force and safari hunt (to name a few of my favourites). Awesome to see a classic console resurrected and thanks for bringing back some very distant memories
"I know the Master System wasn't a very popular system", I think you need to caveat that with "in the US" as it was very popular in the EU and Brazil :) That said, excellent job on the repair. Great to see another classic console live on!
Wasn't the SG-1000 also sold in Brazil? I could imagine the difficulty of getting an import licence for such a thing, considering how much Brazil was against importing any durable goods back then.
I'm one of the Americans that had a Sega Master System. Later on I also got the NES. This was when Game Rentals were really starting to take off. After the Genesis and the SNES came out the rental stores sold the older games at low prices. I picked up some good NES games that way.
I love the Master System so much! Really enjoy your videos too, some of the most honest repair videos on TH-cam, and that's what makes them so fun to watch.
I’m not into all that computer/electrical engineering stuff but you not only captured my attention, you made me wanna cheer for you. I was fistbumping the air when the game worked. Good job, subbed.
I absolutely LOVE board repair jobs, although this particular repair looked like a real pain. Great job on it and great videos. I use your vids to help teach my son board repairs. Thanks for the content!
You got my subscription. Not sure what the hack was but definitely encouraged me that patience and approaching the repair logically can go a long way. I repaired a broken trace on an old tascam tape recorder that I was able to then sell for $300 profit. I recapped a small board on our toaster to get it working. Repair is so fun and rewarding
Ha the hack was meant to be using wire strands in lieu of magnet wire and nail polish instead of solder resist. Glad you enjoyed the video and I couldn't agree more about the satisfaction of fixing things.
Sweet collection in the background, reminds me of my own method of organization. I like to have each shelf be like a little shrine to the whole system. But I imagine you have a ton more games stored away out of sight and these are just your prized examples.
I'm more of a fix-it nerd than a video game collector. I have a more impressive console collection than a game collection. The organization system has worked well for far. I might be re-doing it soon to create a more interesting backdrop for you guys.
Aww man, I loved the sega master system. My aunt had one at her house when I was growing up. I would play it nonstop every time I was there. Me and my cousins use to play after burner, super hang-on, zaxxon, and Alex Kid. I would love to have one now
I can't imagine the level of satisfaction you get doing these kinds of repairs! mad respect! your setup is ... like the name of your channel... borderline OCD ! congrats!
Mad respect for ur skill and patience 👍 the master system was my 1st system I had back in the 80s, I reme Hang On, R type & Wonder boy In Monster Land (1 of my all time favourite on the system, that too me ages to complete). I'm now thinking of getting a cheap from Cex and re-living my childhood experience again, thanks 😚
These old consoles are always an enigma, i have found them on dumpsters standing on all kinds of weather and they still work and others all shiny in the box and are faulty. Ps the Master System is super appreciated in countries like Brasil. Great skills fixing this beauty
Glad you enjoyed it bud. This one is in peculiarly good cosmetic condition so it will always remain somewhat of a mystery as to how exactly that damage took place.
Crazy Master System story. Buddy from high school gave me his with the story that it doesnt work. First thing I did was test the power supply and BAM. Thats all it was. Little bit of knowledge goes a long way, and thats why I enjoy your vids so much.
Glad you got that system working and I've actually found your experience to be quite common with faulty system. Too often its a bad power supply, a loose or broken power connector, or a bad fuse. All very simple faults to remedy even for beginners and another system saved from the dumps.
@@BorderlineOCD Someone got a bit over-excited popping those carts in and out. Either that or they stored something on top of the unit with the cart pulgged in.
Love the model 1 master system. Here in the UK the master system was very popular. A lot of my friends had them. I had the master system adapter for the game gear. Games were so much cheaper than megadrive and nes. Great time to be a gamer especially the 2nd hand market due to its popularity . Well done on your hard work. 🥂
Thanks for sharing. I didn't know there was an adapter for the Game Gear, thats ridiculous! But now that I think about it, the Game Gear was a miniaturized Master System after all. It was probably a simple size adapter rather than something more complicated. Very cool.
What I really like about these older consoles is they built them like tanks so kids could play with them and they'd last. The master system was quite popular here in Europe. Many of us kids had one. A couple of friends had a nintendo, we got one after the success/fun factor of the master system. Loved both the systems.
That was insane. Ive seen some wire repairs before, nothing quite as nice and precise as this. Props with the skill, time to practice. Thanks for the video, i know im a lil late lol.
I've had a soldering iron for years, brand new in box. As a retro collector soldering and maintaining these old consoles is a must have skill..... but I'm terrified to start learning. Great content.
Late tot he party, but I make it a point to leave comments when I can. And your videos always earn a 'like' anyway. One thing I don't miss (as I watch you plug in the controller) is how much 'work' goes in to plugging in those old controllers on older consoles. Rocking the plug back and forth as you plug in has always grated on my nerves. Also, I made this kind of repair. Took a lot of work. Seems on the master system AND consoles with 'top loaders' that is a common problem eventually. This was definitely fun to watch. I don't miss doing those kind of repairs.
Enjoyed the video. You made the best of the "lovely repair" Excellent soldering skills. That kind of stuff is mind numbing. I use to touch up Ratheon boards for a government contract years ago and it was the pits.
This is a great primer on some techniques for fixing broken traces on video game consoles, but anything similar like electronic music gear. Thanks for the upload!
Great work. I’ve been teaching myself to repair audio equipment but I’m also a retro gamer enthusiast. This was so inspiro watch and your taste in background music is superb! I learned some new stuff from watching this for sure!
Great video, and great job 👍 Wow! It big pleasure when guys like you repair and give new life to consoles from past. You save that Sega and now it work again. Super! 😊
Great repair work! I like the way the video is interesting for people with the console, for people interested in learning soldering skills and for people who need to learn patience!
wow, that's actually in better shape than the "for parts" one I'm trying to fix - and paid a little more for :( But "WHAT" you have to fix is incredible! GOOD JOB!! And it only took one Red Bull LOL You deserve a medal or something bud!
Always love watching your videos. That looks like it was a very delicate reoair as well with so many being broke and so close together. Watching your videos got me fully taking my consoles apart. Would have only went to disk drive/power supply. Now fully take them apart to clean. Have to start on the soldering soon.
I’m glad you’re taking your consoles apart to give them a thorough cleaning. That’s already a step further than the majority of people would go. Your systems are probably running quieter and cooler as a result specially the systems with heat sinks and fans. Never too late to start messing with a soldiering iron. Christmas is right around the corner, maybe a basic iron is your gift to yourself ;)
nice work. really a good job. i've done something like this in the 2001 at school for training and.... yeah, without flux because my school doesn't have it in stock.
That's pretty funny. I can tell you right now my soldering is completely worthless without flux. I don't know how you can do a job like this without it!
Mighty fine work I would have taken a different route to jumper the points and it wouldn't have looked nearly as good as yours. I'm glad I watched this video
Nice repair. I had a Master System back in the day. Alex Kidd, California games, Robocop Vs Terminator. And a game called World Soccer, had a great soundtrack. Good times 👍
I was one out of three kids to own one at my school (NY) and I found out after graduation! So three out of 1200. You were quite lucky your buds each had one.
I got mine for my birthday. It was used and I got it in a plastic bag with Bart vs. the Space Mutants and The Incredible Crash Dummies. It even had the initials of the previous owner scratched into the bottom case. A friend/neighbor next door had one with dozens of games. I recall at least a couple of other kids I swapped games with (wish I remembered the names of some of those games --- haven't been able to find one in particular that I played a ton, even exploring the full ROM set recently in emulation). I always thought the NES was cooler but didn't own one till many years later (long after the SNES was released). It's cool that you owned one as well especially given it was seemingly unpopular in the US.
@@BorderlineOCD I didn't like the NES' watered down color and I thought the robot was silly. It also didn't have aggressive vibe. At the time, the NES only had arcade conversions of games I had an ambivalent feeling for (save for Popeye). I also knew if I wanted Space Harrier (fav arcade game), Hang-On, and maybe Zaxxon, Nintendo wouldn't port it (not immediately anyway in the case for Space Harrier). Soon after (1987) I relented and got an NES for 1/4 of the price from a video shop that was closing. All I can say is this: when I got After Burner ALL my friends wanted to hang out and play it. Then they saw the other games.
Mine came with the same fault :D fixing that was easy as cake :) mine had only one broken solder. Nice video showing a common fault on that consoles to help everybody that has the same fault. :)
If you open it up again, I would suggest flowing fresh solder on all the power button joints. I found that about half the ones I’ve come across over the years were cold/cracked. Easy peasy fix.
I have a master system with Hang on and Safari Hunt built in, plus the snail game. I had no idea there were versions where there was only the snail game built in? Mine has a fault with the pause button needing replaced but other than that its in good order. Cant believe how damaged this one was for you. No idea how those traces were damaged like that, other than someone pulling at the carts too hard? Well done on this repair.
im this kind of soldering dedicated :D i would of did this exact soldering repair, cause these old consoles don't belong in the landfill. new subscriber here thanks for keeping the retro console alive :D
Awesome repair. You have the patience of a saint. Your soldering has gotten so much better since you started. I can really see the confidence you have now as you develop that muscle memory. Great job. It always feels good to fix something!
Thanks man. I can definitely see my skills have improved, especially when I revisit my earlier projects. It's pretty funny to see the difference. Thanks for the continued support!
You said it so well very impressed 👍
Ah yes, gotta love the sight of broken traces from mechanical fatigue! In all seriousness, I can see this problem being both time consuming and annoying to deal with. So well done!
You’re up watching TH-cam awfully early my West Coast friend :P Thanks for the comment bud, much appreciated.
@@BorderlineOCD had to go to work early, that's why ;P
I got a sega genesis that sadly will never be fixed it’s traces are gone, motherboard was cracked with jumper wires and left outside to rust sadly.
@@charliemartin-k7m the chipset might still be good, for units with dead ICs.
It seems like this was actually due to improper installation of the cartridge port.. they didn't fully seat it and the force of pushing in the cartridge was subjected to the PINs only, when it should have been fully mounted to the mainboard...
I've never seen a repair job quite like this. Patience wins the day! Glad that system didn't end up in a garbage dump. Great work.
Glad you enjoyed it
The precision with which you soldered those jumper wires was like watching a surgeon. I am in awe! Fantastic work!
It's so nice to see a gentleman doing repairs, by maintaining an outstanding mix of proper humor with proper language and arguments. Congratulations!
Thank you kind sir.
I sent you an email a while back thanking you for spreading knowledge like this. Its far more inspiring and far more helpful to have that dialog during the video and than videos where it’s just 3x speed with no guidance. It’s cool if that what someone likes but that’s just “repair porn” to me. You fucking rock man, and thanks again for the content.
Wow thanks for the kind words man, I appreciate it and it's viewers like you that make sharing this hobby worthwhile. I enjoy all sorts of repair and restoration content myself and there are many great creators out there, each with their own style. I think my repair journey resonates with some viewers more than others because I had no idea what I was doing when I started and slowly improved with each repair. Folks that are beginners or on the fence about taking up this hobby can relate to someone who started out a similar way (compared to someone that does this for a living). In any case, glad you enjoy the content this much and thank you again for the support.
This is the most work extensive repair I have seen you do I am very impressed with your patience. And I'm shocked that this happened to this Master system they are very good consoles that last for a very long time I'm pretty sure somebody drop it a few times
I appreciate it bud. My soldering has come quite some way over the past couple of years and repairs like this feel more approachable. Most importantly I am enjoying it more than ever.
at least not the cheaper small version, all of mine are dead with a short somewhere.
Pretty sure the factory soldered the cartridge connector when it wasn’t fully inserted through the through holes. This meant there was a gap between the connector housing and the top of the PCB. Inserting a game would push the connector down, stressing the solder connections and traces until they finally gave. Suddenly the gap was gone, but the traces were ruined. :(
Horrifying.
Yes, this is definitely wear from the cart being pushed in and having a gap to the board.
I think this is the most credible theory given the otherwise mint condition of the rest of the board (and shell).
That was my thought immediately. The only question I had after this is - was the connector fully through after the repair? I'd be worried about the potential for a repeat of this issue in the future.
@@EvilAng3la My thought as well. At least he added thin wires, which can take some bending. Just soldering across cracked traces is really weak (based on my experience).
This was a terrific tutorial. A great learning experience having worked with repairing traces before. You are very thorough, logical and organized. Honestly I was cheering you on every step of the way and thrilled that it worked! Superb video and congrats!
Watching you repair those traces was like art. Talk about impressive work.
Nice work! I was wondering what on earth the previous owner had done to the machine to break all those traces, but someone very nicely explained what probably happened due to a factory error that broke over time. It was great to see you doing that extensive patch-wire work, hopefully I learned something for the future. Thank you for sharing!
Each time you insert and remove the cartridge, those pins will move a little bit. Over time the mechanical stress will break them, no matter how careful you are with it.
Great job, great to see a lovely old Master System saved. This was my first console, it has a lot of great RPG's, arcade conversions, and Alex Kidd of course.
Yes indeed, happy to have got it working! I do enjoy the library of SMS games even as an adult on emulation. Part of that is nostalgia with the few games I owned but its fun to discover all the games I wasn't aware of too.
@@BorderlineOCD same this was my first system loved wonder boy 3!
man , i always thought myself good with a soldering iron , but cripes your solder skills are out of this world , hats off to you
God, I love how there are people like you that take the time to repair all these consoles. You're doing an awesome job. Loved the video.
I literally said "that brings back memories" seconds before you said exactly the same. As I remember Bubble Bobble on the Master System was one of the better conversions due to all the extra levels. Oh the amount of hours and late nights doing two player and trying to find all the secrets in it was probably the most me and my wife ever put into one game together. I even made my own controller for it from an old speaker enclosure and parts from an old broken Jump Bug cocktail arcade machine.
Nostalgia is what really drives this hobby. I understand your sentiments completely.
wonderboy and california games takes me waaaay back. I was 3 when the master system came out haha
That was an impressive repair and wonderful skills.
That game brings back memories. I was broke so had to hire a Sega console from the video store. This game was/is addictive. Great repair and soldering skills. Classic! Thanks 😉
That amount of traces to repair is a real pain in the rear, so it must have been very rewarding to have the work pay off.
I do like that bent tip on the iron too. Good job, mate.
Wow, that must have been tedious! I happen to have a Master System in my possession that has this same symptom. I never got around to diagnosing it, but I have a feeling that you may have just done it for me, hehe.
Looking at the tear down, this may also explain why Genesis consoles have a small plastic brace underneath the cart slot and held by the cartridge screws. I’m gonna guess that over time, the pressure of inserting cartridges flexed the board and damaged the traces over time. Looks like Sega may have been aware of this and learned from their mistake for the Genesis. Great video man!
Glad you enjoyed it. Hope you repair your SMS as well :)
This is what I was looking for. This is the best clean lined trace repairs I’ve seen, yet. Here on TH-cam.
FYI you can buy reels of enamel wire in any gauge you need. I’ve used enamel wire in phone and computer board repairs. Nice thing about enamel wire is that the wires can be near other contacts and won’t short.
I watch so many videos like this, I constantly think I could do that, it's easy! While I could do it I know it's not easy and I'd probably spend more time trying to make it look perfect only to make it look worse lol. Great job, I really need to get into more work like this to get my skills up where my mind likes to think they are.
Haha, if you enjoy it keep at it. I'm no expert, could barely swap a component out a couple of years ago. But its a hobby I enjoy so I continue to improve with each repair.
I had a master system plus when I was a kid and loved it dearly. I believe it's still in its box at my mother's house. I spent more hours than I can count playing games like moonwalker, ghost busters, galaxy force and safari hunt (to name a few of my favourites). Awesome to see a classic console resurrected and thanks for bringing back some very distant memories
"I know the Master System wasn't a very popular system", I think you need to caveat that with "in the US" as it was very popular in the EU and Brazil :) That said, excellent job on the repair. Great to see another classic console live on!
Wasn't the SG-1000 also sold in Brazil? I could imagine the difficulty of getting an import licence for such a thing, considering how much Brazil was against importing any durable goods back then.
Your British and European brethren have made that clear to me haha. Noted.
I'm one of the Americans that had a Sega Master System. Later on I also got the NES. This was when Game Rentals were really starting to take off. After the Genesis and the SNES came out the rental stores sold the older games at low prices. I picked up some good NES games that way.
That statement surprised me too. It did very well in the UK. Brilliant video btw, impressive work - I've subscribed. :)
First try is the best feeling ever. That's what you get for having a well planned approach to the job
Thank you, cheers.
I love the Master System so much! Really enjoy your videos too, some of the most honest repair videos on TH-cam, and that's what makes them so fun to watch.
Great to see another master system fan and appreciate your comments about the channel. Cheers!
It's always so satisfying to fix something given up for dead, well done.
Agree completely, thanks for watching.
First time I slow down a video just to see how you work on that pins and mother board, this channel is going to be a great one to follow.
Welcome aboard!
this was the first system we ever owned and man this brought me back.
I have no idea why I'm watching this, I have zero interest in any of this yet here I am mesmerized by it.
I envy your patience.
I’m not into all that computer/electrical engineering stuff but you not only captured my attention, you made me wanna cheer for you. I was fistbumping the air when the game worked.
Good job, subbed.
Haha glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for the sub.
I absolutely LOVE board repair jobs, although this particular repair looked like a real pain. Great job on it and great videos. I use your vids to help teach my son board repairs. Thanks for the content!
You got my subscription. Not sure what the hack was but definitely encouraged me that patience and approaching the repair logically can go a long way. I repaired a broken trace on an old tascam tape recorder that I was able to then sell for $300 profit. I recapped a small board on our toaster to get it working. Repair is so fun and rewarding
Ha the hack was meant to be using wire strands in lieu of magnet wire and nail polish instead of solder resist. Glad you enjoyed the video and I couldn't agree more about the satisfaction of fixing things.
@@BorderlineOCD and here I was thinking those were just professional solutions lol
Sweet collection in the background, reminds me of my own method of organization. I like to have each shelf be like a little shrine to the whole system. But I imagine you have a ton more games stored away out of sight and these are just your prized examples.
I'm more of a fix-it nerd than a video game collector. I have a more impressive console collection than a game collection. The organization system has worked well for far. I might be re-doing it soon to create a more interesting backdrop for you guys.
Great job saving that system. I had an MS and MS2, they were great systems. I have fond memories of playing Alex Kidd in Miracle world on the MS2.
Aww man, I loved the sega master system. My aunt had one at her house when I was growing up. I would play it nonstop every time I was there. Me and my cousins use to play after burner, super hang-on, zaxxon, and Alex Kid. I would love to have one now
I had to watch it twice. Did this dude just manually print a section of circuit board? I think he did. My soldering kung-fu is weak. Good job man.
I can't imagine the level of satisfaction you get doing these kinds of repairs! mad respect! your setup is ... like the name of your channel... borderline OCD ! congrats!
Haha thank you. It's a very satisfying hobby thats for sure and I enjoy it very much.
Thank God you addressed the fingerprints at the end. nice work!
Mad respect for ur skill and patience 👍 the master system was my 1st system I had back in the 80s, I reme Hang On, R type & Wonder boy In Monster Land (1 of my all time favourite on the system, that too me ages to complete). I'm now thinking of getting a cheap from Cex and re-living my childhood experience again, thanks 😚
Feels like someone pushed a cartridge in too hard, what a amazing job you did, another system saved and it's amazing!
Thank you!
These old consoles are always an enigma, i have found them on dumpsters standing on all kinds of weather and they still work and others all shiny in the box and are faulty.
Ps the Master System is super appreciated in countries like Brasil.
Great skills fixing this beauty
Glad you enjoyed it bud. This one is in peculiarly good cosmetic condition so it will always remain somewhat of a mystery as to how exactly that damage took place.
@@BorderlineOCD maybe happened because of forcing the game cartridges in or shaking them when inserted
That's a great work! I am pretty new to soldering, never saw electronic varnish to protect the board!!! That's a real professional work!
The proper stuff to use is called solder resist, I just use nail polish as a bit of a hack. Glad you enjoyed it.
Crazy Master System story. Buddy from high school gave me his with the story that it doesnt work. First thing I did was test the power supply and BAM. Thats all it was. Little bit of knowledge goes a long way, and thats why I enjoy your vids so much.
Glad you got that system working and I've actually found your experience to be quite common with faulty system. Too often its a bad power supply, a loose or broken power connector, or a bad fuse. All very simple faults to remedy even for beginners and another system saved from the dumps.
You’re a magician ,Great job on a great system I really appreciate seeing one of my favorite systems being brought back to life.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed the project. Great to meet all the SMS fans.
I had this console as a kid and everyone else got the nintendo lol, very cool to see one brought back to life and quite impressive skills to do it.
Thanks very much!
I love that you show the clean up and reorganizing of your work area. Nice work on the repair too. Learned something today.
Thanks 👍 Indeed I can't stand clutter or mess. I like things nice and tidy.
I saw the problem as soon as you turned it over. Nice to see you persevere and bring it back to working order.
Good catch. Took me a couple of minutes to focus my eyes on the right area.
@@BorderlineOCD Someone got a bit over-excited popping those carts in and out. Either that or they stored something on top of the unit with the cart pulgged in.
Incredible. If you know how to repair old consoles you have a superpower nowadays...
I would love to think so :P But I think issues like torn traces are somewhat common in electronics repair.
Love the model 1 master system. Here in the UK the master system was very popular. A lot of my friends had them. I had the master system adapter for the game gear. Games were so much cheaper than megadrive and nes. Great time to be a gamer especially the 2nd hand market due to its popularity . Well done on your hard work. 🥂
Thanks for sharing. I didn't know there was an adapter for the Game Gear, thats ridiculous! But now that I think about it, the Game Gear was a miniaturized Master System after all. It was probably a simple size adapter rather than something more complicated. Very cool.
that was amazing , i didnt think you would continue with the repair , when you noticed a lot of broken traces ,
What I really like about these older consoles is they built them like tanks so kids could play with them and they'd last. The master system was quite popular here in Europe. Many of us kids had one. A couple of friends had a nintendo, we got one after the success/fun factor of the master system. Loved both the systems.
That was insane. Ive seen some wire repairs before, nothing quite as nice and precise as this. Props with the skill, time to practice. Thanks for the video, i know im a lil late lol.
I've had a soldering iron for years, brand new in box. As a retro collector soldering and maintaining these old consoles is a must have skill..... but I'm terrified to start learning. Great content.
“I was born in it molded by it. I didn't see the light until I was already a man and by then it was nothing to me but blinding.”
Super Job. I don't have a steady enough hand for this kind of fine work, especially that much of it. Bravo.
Thank you very much!
That intro the second you power on.. epic!
Considering you don't show any emotions, when that game booted that must have been pretty darn satisfying :) Great work sir.
Thanks to the TH-cam algorithm, I have discovered a new to me repair channel.
Subscribed.
Of all the consoles that you have repaired, this is undoubtedly the most laborious
I agree, its up there in terms of times spent. Was a really fun project and very pleased with the outcome!
I just can't believe the accuracy on the wiring work, bro that was just awesome!!
Glad you liked it.
@@BorderlineOCD you need better music tho haha
Late tot he party, but I make it a point to leave comments when I can. And your videos always earn a 'like' anyway.
One thing I don't miss (as I watch you plug in the controller) is how much 'work' goes in to plugging in those old controllers on older consoles. Rocking the plug back and forth as you plug in has always grated on my nerves.
Also, I made this kind of repair. Took a lot of work. Seems on the master system AND consoles with 'top loaders' that is a common problem eventually. This was definitely fun to watch. I don't miss doing those kind of repairs.
Enjoyed the video. You made the best of the "lovely repair" Excellent soldering skills. That kind of stuff is mind numbing. I use to touch up Ratheon boards for a government contract years ago and it was the pits.
Great work 👏 The Sega Master System 2 was my first console. Hang On brings back memories.
Glad you enjoyed it and I'm enjoying chatting with folks whom share the nostalgia of owning the SMS.
This is a great primer on some techniques for fixing broken traces on video game consoles, but anything similar like electronic music gear. Thanks for the upload!
Great to hear you may have found it helpful.
That repair earned you my subscription well done.
Thanks for the sub, much appreciated.
Great work. I’ve been teaching myself to repair audio equipment but I’m also a retro gamer enthusiast. This was so inspiro watch and your taste in background music is superb! I learned some new stuff from watching this for sure!
Glad you found it useful. Cheers.
your soldering skills and the tweezer, wow. incredible!
Thank you for documenting this process so well. I'm waiting on parts for a battery bombed amiga. Fantastic job. Hats off to you.
Great video, and great job 👍 Wow! It big pleasure when guys like you repair and give new life to consoles from past. You save that Sega and now it work again. Super! 😊
Glad you enjoyed it, cheers.
Great repair work! I like the way the video is interesting for people with the console, for people interested in learning soldering skills and for people who need to learn patience!
wow, that's actually in better shape than the "for parts" one I'm trying to fix - and paid a little more for :(
But "WHAT" you have to fix is incredible! GOOD JOB!! And it only took one Red Bull LOL
You deserve a medal or something bud!
Lol thanks
Your work is definitely good. I do trace repairs for my job almost every day, and it's very similar work.
Thank you. What kind of work do you do? I'm always interested to hear from folks that do this professionally as its mostly a hobby on my end.
Always love watching your videos. That looks like it was a very delicate reoair as well with so many being broke and so close together. Watching your videos got me fully taking my consoles apart. Would have only went to disk drive/power supply. Now fully take them apart to clean. Have to start on the soldering soon.
I’m glad you’re taking your consoles apart to give them a thorough cleaning. That’s already a step further than the majority of people would go. Your systems are probably running quieter and cooler as a result specially the systems with heat sinks and fans. Never too late to start messing with a soldiering iron. Christmas is right around the corner, maybe a basic iron is your gift to yourself ;)
I use to love playing the hidden snail maze game built into the system, also used these controllers to play on my Atari 400,great video
Deff great video. I own many oldschool consoles and this is the right guy to get them fix. Thank u. Greetings from Texas
I had the NES as a child and my sister had the Master System, it had Hang On built in..loved that game!
nice work. really a good job. i've done something like this in the 2001 at school for training and.... yeah, without flux because my school doesn't have it in stock.
That's pretty funny. I can tell you right now my soldering is completely worthless without flux. I don't know how you can do a job like this without it!
This repair is ART. You dig that POWERBASE out of its grave!
That's high praise, thank you!
Mighty fine work
I would have taken a different route to jumper the points and it wouldn't have looked nearly as good as yours.
I'm glad I watched this video
I used to run wires across the board in earlier repairs. I've gotten better with trace patching and I really enjoy it.
That is one lucky master system, how many people would had the patience and dedication to do this.
You can do this slowly at your pace. It's a hobby after all. Repairing is so much fun.
My first console, the one that started it all. Brings back so many memories. Great video and good job on the repare! 👍
The nostalgia is what makes this such a fun hobby. I understand completely.
Nice repair. I had a Master System back in the day. Alex Kidd, California games, Robocop Vs Terminator. And a game called World Soccer, had a great soundtrack. Good times 👍
Bart vs. the Space Mutants was one I played a lot as a kid. I had a silly game called the Incredible Crash Dummies. Good times indeed.
The Quality Of Your Work Is Amazing...Vastly Superior...Very Good...Thanks For Sharing.
I was shocked that you paid $60 for a broken Master System but then I realized that they must have sold much less in your area. Great video!
NTSC SMS systems cost a bit more but honestly in this day and age any retro video game hardware is expensive.
Smashed bison . Amazing work I couldn't even see that wire. Signature nail polish nice
I love Master System grew up with it here in Australia so great memories with this console growing up. Great repair video 👍
It's all about the nostalgia, that's why we love retro games. Very fond memories of this system on my end too.
I was one out of three kids to own one at my school (NY) and I found out after graduation! So three out of 1200. You were quite lucky your buds each had one.
I got mine for my birthday. It was used and I got it in a plastic bag with Bart vs. the Space Mutants and The Incredible Crash Dummies. It even had the initials of the previous owner scratched into the bottom case. A friend/neighbor next door had one with dozens of games. I recall at least a couple of other kids I swapped games with (wish I remembered the names of some of those games --- haven't been able to find one in particular that I played a ton, even exploring the full ROM set recently in emulation). I always thought the NES was cooler but didn't own one till many years later (long after the SNES was released). It's cool that you owned one as well especially given it was seemingly unpopular in the US.
@@BorderlineOCD I didn't like the NES' watered down color and I thought the robot was silly. It also didn't have aggressive vibe. At the time, the NES only had arcade conversions of games I had an ambivalent feeling for (save for Popeye). I also knew if I wanted Space Harrier (fav arcade game), Hang-On, and maybe Zaxxon, Nintendo wouldn't port it (not immediately anyway in the case for Space Harrier). Soon after (1987) I relented and got an NES for 1/4 of the price from a video shop that was closing. All I can say is this: when I got After Burner ALL my friends wanted to hang out and play it. Then they saw the other games.
Very relaxing watch. If we all had the right knowledge and patience like this so many systems could be saved. Great content my friend. Huge like 👍
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it.
Mine came with the same fault :D fixing that was easy as cake :) mine had only one broken solder. Nice video showing a common fault on that consoles to help everybody that has the same fault. :)
Glad you got your system working!
I'd recommend a fiber pen for the scraping. They work great and give you excellent control removing the coating, but no copper.
If you open it up again, I would suggest flowing fresh solder on all the power button joints. I found that about half the ones I’ve come across over the years were cold/cracked. Easy peasy fix.
Thanks for the tip. Cheers.
Nice the first master system is not as common to find a mate has his original complete with its original box .Superb work on the repair .
Many thanks! Would love to have an in-box unit but the manual and boxed cart are are nice addition nonetheless.
Wow. I hope my soldering skills get to your level someday !
I have a master system with Hang on and Safari Hunt built in, plus the snail game. I had no idea there were versions where there was only the snail game built in? Mine has a fault with the pause button needing replaced but other than that its in good order. Cant believe how damaged this one was for you. No idea how those traces were damaged like that, other than someone pulling at the carts too hard? Well done on this repair.
im this kind of soldering dedicated :D i would of did this exact soldering repair, cause these old consoles don't belong in the landfill. new subscriber here thanks for keeping the retro console alive :D
Thanks for the sub!
Mate this video was sensational!! I appreciate your time showing us some skills!!!!
Great video. Very excellent attention to details. I couldn't imagine the time it took to fix this. Looks picture perfect. I better keep practicing.😀
Love this format and now a Master Systems turn to be repaired.
Glad to hear you're liking the new format as I experiment more with the storytelling side of things.
Subscribed, my friend. Gonna make sure I keep posted on these calm, dedicated vibes that you're broadcasting.
Thanks for the sub my man.
That was some fine repair work sir! Reminds me of me! Minus the redbull. That garbage is poison, quit it!
Glad you enjoyed it. I drink Redbull for the flavor. There's just nothing like it.