So how many of these came out on cartridges? I know Pixelh8 made 100 of the music tech cartridge, but are there any others?

226

(30 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Holy shit that's expensive.

Crazy that you can sustain a business only dealing with decal removal!

Video link added! Check it out. This is EASY people!

229

(1,206 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

egr wrote:

Oh, home made "flash cart"!  For some reason when I read this earlier I thought those carts had somehow been fitted with a Super GB processor and couldn't figure out why someone would do that.  tongue

Now that would be slick tongue

But no. In the first picture you see a DMG motherboard, that has been fitted with a SGB CPU.

So I find myself sometimes in the need of removing stickers in a non destructive manner, to be able to re-apply them.

Maybe you want to dye your DMG, and still want the serial number sticker intact.
By using this method you will not crumble any corners, and the glue will still stick.
You can even use this method on security stickers like Windows serial stickers, without them breaking.
I have used this method with a laptop with a windows serial sticker, that was checked by an anti-pirating group. They did not notice that the sticker had been removed from another laptop.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewFCpuEnIAs

You need:

A prefferably new exacto knife.
A hot air gun.
Tweezers are optional.

Step one:

Prepare your sticker by heating it with the hot air gun. Be carefull not to overheat it. Both the sticker and the casing can be damaged during this step. Practice first on a non important item.

Step two:

Insert the exacto blade under the sticker in one corner. Maybe you need to heat the sticker while doing this if the glue is getting cold. SLOWLY peel off the sticker.
You MUST wait till the sticker is heated enough and the glue lets go. Otherwise you will get crumbling in the corner you start peeling off. Larger stickers may need gradual heating while you remove the sticker. This apply to windows serial stickers and the like.

Step three:

Place the sticker on some sticker paper, or plastic sheet till you need to re-apply it.

Step four:

Remove the sticker from the sticker paper paper, and apply it in the desired spot. Momentarely heat the sticker and apply pressure to make the glue set the best possible way, and keep pressure on it till the sticker is cold. Now the glue has set and your done!

231

(1,206 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

thebitman wrote:
egr wrote:

Hey what's the functionality of that?  Is the cart case just an enclosure or is this somehow used with a gameboy?

It's a cart with an embedded socket, it's just easy to reprogram by popping the IC out. Much like kitsch's socketed carts, but a bit different and to a degree a bit more primitive since it doesn't use a custom PCB but a heavily rewired one.

Those are 32 Pin PLCC sockets. Features:

Atmel AT49F04090 Flash 4 Mb

MBC 3 mapper.

256 K Ram

232

(1,206 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

I'm probably one of the very few who has a SGB CPU DMG.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/62235217@N07/6009212169/

Oh and this http://www.flickr.com/photos/62235217@N … otostream/

233

(19 replies, posted in Trading Post)

More stuff.

234

(9 replies, posted in General Discussion)

Just make sure EVERYTHING is packed and working before going.

235

(6 replies, posted in Other Hardware)

I could build you one, but I'm in europe.

236

(35 replies, posted in General Discussion)

I buy vinyl

237

(6 replies, posted in Other Hardware)

If you do this you need to buffer the output. Otherwise you will get popping sounds.

238

(12 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

Oh nitro I newer saw that before. That was one of the features. There's more thou.

239

(19 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Denmark

240

(19 replies, posted in Trading Post)

stress_tn: I've sent you a pm yesterday.

Update:

I have 3 clearboys on the way in. Unmodded. Also I have regular N64, and atomic orange N64 with controllers, games and such.

Openminded to ANY trade.