Hi . stopped the vid at 7.29 from feed, And se some funky solder... go back to Bius chip go up to black circle pan rite up a bit there it is i think just above the chip.. something od prob wrong ...
Would you be able to repair a PS1 board? I had a board that stopped working after I went to connect a loose ribbon cable, it was modded with a Xstation, after a few months I bought a replacement console of same model and then suddenly the first one "worked" in that it booted but had a distorted picture and slow audio, I desoldered the xstation and when soldering to the 2nd one I didn't notice I flicked off a few capacitors, I tried desoldering from old board to new one but as they are so small I kept losing them!
I like how a SNES and PlayStation are in one video - with the PlayStation being Sony going alone and creating a 32-bit console after the Nintendo-Sony "Play Station" (SNES with built-in CD-ROM drive) and the SNES CD-ROM add-on (both of which Sony were involved in, after developing the SNES sound chip) were both cancelled due to Nintendo changing to a partnership with Philips, which in the end only resulted in the Nintendo games on the CDi. Super Everdrive is nice but I believe it only supports one cartridge expansion chip at best, the DSP-1 (used in games like Super Mario Kart and Pilotwings), so at most, only 16 of the 73 expansion chip games will work (if any). I think for any games that use any of the other cartridge expansion chips including Super FX 1+2 (StarFox, Stunt Race FX, Yoshi's Island, Doom etc), an SD2SNES Pro / FX Pak Pro would be required.
Can you help me with my snes only showing a black screen? I cleaned the game cartridge slot and i am afraid it's one of the chips but i can't test them.
You need to test the address and data lines on the CPU, PPU1 and PPU2 using either an oscilloscope or logic probe. Look to see if any of the lines are being held low (0v) or high (5v). If some of those lines are held either high or low and don't change it likely indicates a fault with the CPU, PPU1, PPU2 or potentially VRAM or WRAM IC's. A black screen is most probably the CPU or PPU chips from the SNES's I've tested over time.
Missed you live again, TH-cam completely failed to notify me again - bell still on "all"... oh well, I'll watch this replay tomorrow 😝
support.google.com/youtube/answer/7391308?hl=en&co=GENIE.Platform%3DAndroid
Hi . stopped the vid at 7.29 from feed, And se some funky solder... go back to Bius chip go up to black circle pan rite up a bit there it is i think just above the chip.. something od prob wrong ...
Would you be able to repair a PS1 board? I had a board that stopped working after I went to connect a loose ribbon cable, it was modded with a Xstation, after a few months I bought a replacement console of same model and then suddenly the first one "worked" in that it booted but had a distorted picture and slow audio, I desoldered the xstation and when soldering to the 2nd one I didn't notice I flicked off a few capacitors, I tried desoldering from old board to new one but as they are so small I kept losing them!
I like how a SNES and PlayStation are in one video - with the PlayStation being Sony going alone and creating a 32-bit console after the Nintendo-Sony "Play Station" (SNES with built-in CD-ROM drive) and the SNES CD-ROM add-on (both of which Sony were involved in, after developing the SNES sound chip) were both cancelled due to Nintendo changing to a partnership with Philips, which in the end only resulted in the Nintendo games on the CDi.
Super Everdrive is nice but I believe it only supports one cartridge expansion chip at best, the DSP-1 (used in games like Super Mario Kart and Pilotwings), so at most, only 16 of the 73 expansion chip games will work (if any). I think for any games that use any of the other cartridge expansion chips including Super FX 1+2 (StarFox, Stunt Race FX, Yoshi's Island, Doom etc), an SD2SNES Pro / FX Pak Pro would be required.
may have found missing parts on the laptop from earlier??
Hmm, What did you spot? I noticed a lot of unpopulated spots on the board but nothing blatantly missing. That said, it is a big board.
Can you help me with my snes only showing a black screen? I cleaned the game cartridge slot and i am afraid it's one of the chips but i can't test them.
You need to test the address and data lines on the CPU, PPU1 and PPU2 using either an oscilloscope or logic probe.
Look to see if any of the lines are being held low (0v) or high (5v). If some of those lines are held either high or low and don't change it likely indicates a fault with the CPU, PPU1, PPU2 or potentially VRAM or WRAM IC's.
A black screen is most probably the CPU or PPU chips from the SNES's I've tested over time.
@@NewRetroRepair thanks a lot!!