it will involve iso alcohol, a very careful disassembly and assembly... and i'm told it may need some graphite pencil...
will do, I'll take a pic or two along the way. Fingers crossed!
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it will involve iso alcohol, a very careful disassembly and assembly... and i'm told it may need some graphite pencil...
will do, I'll take a pic or two along the way. Fingers crossed!
Another thrift shop day (hope I am not boring anyone too much with these :p)
a pair of PlayStation 2 consoles bundled with 2 PS1 controllers each (the shop actually had 3 of these, as well as 2 PS1s for the same price and also an XBox for a few dollars more, but these were good enough :P), both working (and 1 had a FFX disc in it)
a MadCatz PS2 controller 'tap'
Lego Bionicle: Quest for Makuta adventure game (2001)
Smurfette (always had a soft spot for the Smurfs, ever since they came to Canada, around when I was 9)
also got a few small upgrades for my PC, a 750 Watt PS and an extra 16GB RAM (@1866mhz)
This is only way I know to post pictures.Attachment 100610Attachment 100611Attachment 100612Attachment 100614Attachment 100618
Underneath the silver sticker is a Yamaha
3812 chip This is a original boxed item.
Savior - no one's bored mate, it's interesting, keep posting. Mine are boring but i don't care hah. This arrived NIB. I like to have one good controller per system. Altho GC pads are generally bullet proof.
http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/2016...7d4efac1d2.jpg
Sent from my SM-G920F using Tapatalk
Got a Kryoflux not too long ago and have been looking for a decent cabinet to put my floppy drives in together with the Kryoflux instead of having everything lying around loosely connected on my table.
Last week I got a nice (and free!) small chassis which I think was originally used for an optical drive. Today I finished integrating the Kryoflux, power supply, 5.25" drive and the 3.5" drive on top as seen on the pictures.
I had an external PSU from a faulty external HDD chassis, but the PSU was good and was specced for 5V 2A, 12V 2A, twice of the original PSU in this chassis which was not working well. This PSU is now mounted inside the chassis using a gap pad (thermal) to conduct its heat on to the bottom of the chassis. As mentioned, the Kryoflux is also internal mounted on a bent piece of sheet steel and I made a hole for the USB connector. The 3.5" drive is secured using four screw holes through the top of the chassis so it is not going anywhere.
I think this is a quite nice and small solution and it works well (after some trouble with the flat cable which I had to customize but it is sorted now).
Attachment 100651Attachment 100652
@demolition
That looks really nice! It's great that you have it all in one so you can easily move it out of the way when you don't need it. :)
Heather
Attachment 101623
Just saved these from going to the tip :thumbsup:
Just built myself a joystick converter so I can hook up a regular Atari/Commodore joystick to my PC.
Attachment 101773
Built using an Arduino Pro Micro board and presents itself to the system as a HID joystick. Tested and working fine with WinUAE. :)