Spyke
consolerepair·Console Repairbyrob200

How to repair your non responding L and R buttons on a DS lite. (might work on other DS models as well but don't quote me)

I recently ran into this but the fix is simple and doesn't necessarily require you to take the handheld apart.

3 things to try to get your L and R responding again.

  1. blow into and around the shoulder area space. It's as simple as clearing possible dust that might just simply be preventing your l and r button to click down.

  2. press the specific L or R button that isn't responding in a rapid motion and try pressing in different spots, like the middle or from the left and right side. (press about 30 times) Try to avoid press it hard where you might risk breaking it.

  3. sometimes you can also just kinda press down and listen into to how it clicks and if you feel around while pressing down a few times you can sometimes kinda press it back into sync so it responds again. It's hard to explain this part it but I think you'll get the idea maybe.

I recently just got a DS lite just this past April it was used but in good condition the battery on it still functions. When I ran into this issue I raged untill I found out some ways to "calibrate" the shoulder buttons back to responding to presses as a player would expect.

View original on retrofed.com
consolerepair·Console RepairbyInFerNo

Broken joystick on Power Clutch SG

Hi, I have an Power Clutch SG by Asciiware (also known as the Sega Mega Stick), a controller for the Sega Mega Drive. It's one of my favorite controllers.

Unfortunately my son dropped it a few years ago and snapped the joystick clean off. I have disassembled and removed the joystick. The snap is clean and the 2 parts fit together neatly. I'm looking for the best way to fix this. The joystick itself has no aftermarket alternatives as far as I can find, and buying another one of these to harvest the stick itself is an exercise in futilty as it would leave the other unit without a stick.

The big question is, what adhesive brand/type is best to bond these 2 parts together again? Especially considering the stress this might have to endure.

View original on lemmy.ml
consolerepair·Console Repairbyjoulethief

Recapped XBOX disc drive won't spin

Hey there! Some months ago, I got myself a (first gen) XBOX with the intention of softmodding it. The console would boot up, but not read discs. As far as I remember, it did spin the discs at this point. There was no error message, it just skipped to the main menu after like a minute of trying to read them.

After some research on common issues I checked all resistor networks, which were fine, and went on to replacing the capacitors. I triple-checked to get the right values and place them in the correct orientation. For reference: I got the Samsung SDG-605 (non-B) as seen in this video.

I connected the ribbon cables, checked one final time that everything is in the correct place and put the drive back into the XBOX. Boots up, but this time I see the disc is not spinning. The motor seems fine, since every time the tray closes, I can see it make a quick quarter-turn. It just won't do anything further than that. Then, as usual, it gets me to the main XBOX menu after some waiting time.

What should I do? Ideally I'd like to just get another, known working drive, but I read that the drive's control board is "married" to the mainboard and I'd have to swap it over in case of a replacement. Which seems risky, as this very board seems the most likely culprit. I'd also like to avoid to spend a hundred bucks for a whole new used XBOX. All this is especially frustrating as I only need the damn drive once to get the initial exploit working.

View original on discuss.tchncs.de

Looking for Gameboy cart PCB replacements

Hi all!

I have a few gameboy carts where the PCBs are wrecked with corrosion or in one case it looks like someone took steel wool to the contacts. I suspect the chips are still OK though so I’d like to source some new PCBs if I can so I can swap over the rom chips. Hoping someone knows a source for such a thing.

Specifically, I’d be looking for: DMG-BEAN-01, DMG-BEAN-01, and DMG-GCA-01.

Thanks!

View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console Repairbyv1605

GBA Not Charging Fixed

So after the volume was fixed I discovered the board . Turns out there were multiple issues. First the charge led was dead (tested with multimeter in diode mode) so that is swapped out with a blue one. Then EM8 needed a reflow to get a good connection across. The final issue was a bad trace under the cartridge slot from F2 to D1. For that I added the bodge wire seen in the photo.

View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console Repairbyv1605

GBA SP Low Volume Fix

Picked up a fairly cheap sp that had lots of corrosion on metal parts (power switch, charge port, and volume slider). After cleaning it all up and replacing the volume slider and audio cap, it still had low volume.Turns out there was a broken trace between the volume pad and the U6 (There should be continuity from the via I solder to, over to the via right next to the s in SW11). Adding the bodge fix the issue.

View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console RepairbyRappe

PS4 turns off after 5 minutes, troubleshooting & repair tips requested

Hello,

so my old PS4 (Gen 1, I think, not a huge console person, it's my Bloodborne machine and nothing else) has an issue: it turns off after about 5 minutes of it being on, and when it reboots, it goes to safe mode, does some scans, boots and it happens again within 5 minutes.

At first I thought it was a heating issue or the old HDD breaking down, so I cleaned it thoroughly and replaced HDD with a new SSD. Issue did not go away, so in the name of troubleshooting, I blew cold air into it while it was on, but the exact same thing happened again. Have also reinstalled the OS clean when I swapped to the SSD, didn't do any cloning shenanigans.

Currently my theory is either the main board or PSU that's broken. One other idea I had was that the thermal compound has gone bad on CPU/GPU, but haven't tried replacing that yet, it seemed unlikely to be the issue after I increased the cooling temporarily, should have at least seen an increase in the time it stayed on by my logic.

I have another PS4 I found for free on second hand market app, seller said the PSU broke and is missing, but main board should work fine.

I've been googling this every once in a while, but haven't found any clear answers. I also took some measurements from the connectors, and they seem to give correct voltages, but haven't checked current, and haven't done any long term measurement when it shuts down, so no clue if it's a voltage spike or undervoltage that causes this issue. My oscilloscope is also out of commision, so that complicates any long term measurements.

Does this kind of issue ring a bell for everyone? Any further troubleshooting tips? Should I just plug the PSU into the other PS4 without a PSU and see if the same thing happens? Doesn't 100% rule out the mainboard being the issue, since I have no idea if the mainboard is a known good component on the spare part one either...

I'd really like to finish my Bloodborne perfectionist run some day :)

View original on sopuli.xyz
consolerepair·Console RepairbyPondis

Lines on PSP 2000 screen

I bought a PSP 2000 (yuck) from a friend that had no battery.

The battery took ages to arrive, and when it did, everything was fine for about 20 minutes, then the screen developed vertical lines.

The image isnt mine, its from a YouTube video, but its the exact same issue.

Does anyone know a fix? Some one suggested an LCD replacement.

View original on lemmy.world

[Solved] Repairing a Sega Mega Drive

Hi there, first post here.

I found a Sega Mega Drive in our basement and am working on restoring it. It turns on, but I have no audio or video.

I never used a cartridge-driven console before, so I want to make sure this is not user error. I need to plug in the cartridge before turning on the console, and then there should be a boot screen and eventually the game.

Is it possible for the contacts to be too dirty to allow reading the cartridges?

And then lastly, I had a peek into the maintenance manual I may need to exchange hardware parts. Should I need to; do you know any trustworthy sellers in the EU that could have parts compatible with the Mega Drive? I have been looking for a 53.2034 MHz +/-20ppm oscillater since it could be faulty, but couldn't find any shop that had one with that odd of a MHz frequency.

Any advice is appreciated. :)

Edit: Thank you all for your comments. On further inspection the contacts on the Mega Drive's cartridge-slot were oxidized. A little bit of sand paper did the trick. :)

View original on discuss.tchncs.de
consolerepair·Console RepairbyGrass

dualshock 4 mobo side socket for usb ribbon

I need a replacement for the white plastic socket that the usb/charge board plugs in to. I used hot air to pull out a drifting stick but that also heated and fell off, and of absolutely fucking course, fell into the floor air vent and went on a grand old slippy slide away.

Does anyone know the actual name for this part? Everything I have tried searching so far is apparently wrong

View original on sh.itjust.works
consolerepair·Console Repairbyv1605

GBC Chip Swap, Good Enough

Some background, I originally removed the chips from the board on the left for a Pocket Color Build. It's original fault was no power, which turned out to be a dirty power switch and corroded battery contacts.

The new board had signs of corrosion under the solder mask and previous work (bent ram pins and bridges on the cpu). I decided to move the chips on the other instead of trying to restore the traces. Soldering all went well, until my hand slipped while testing if the connections were solid. One of the pins (bottom left) is pretty bent and the pad on the end was partially lifted.

I was able to heat all those back up and confirm no bridges and the pads are connected. Booted up a quick game to test a screen, sounds and all the buttons. Everything is working.

Moral of the story, be careful and don't put too much pressure on those pins.

View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console Repairbycm0002

Odd issue with an eBay 3DS I'm fixing up

So I've mostly fixed up a 3DS picked up off eBay.

The last issue is an odd one. On boot it acts as though Dpad down is being held, the odd part is it only does this for about 5 seconds after boot, then stops and acts perfectly normal the rest of the time it's been booted. It's always about 5 seconds with or without any interaction

Once powered off and on it does it again.

The big problem though is if I boot to gm9 it won't stop and I suspect it is causing a freeze issue when attempting to execute a script

Anybody know what's up? I've already cleaned the pads with isopropyl

View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console Repairbyv1605

Series X Replacement Hdmi- Funtional

This was my first attempt doing a trace repair on a HDMI port. Seems like everything seems to be working after replacing those caps as well. Played through the tutorial of gears 5 with no issues.

What I've tested:

  1. Playing downloaded game
  2. Playing a Blu-ray
  3. Playing on a 4k TV and 1440 monitor. This one the auto detect preferred 120hz 1080p but manually selecting resolution works great.

What I've learned:

  1. Wired all the pads before soldering the port. I attached the front wires after the port was soldered. Should have just done them all.
  2. A cheap grinding pen is so much easier to use than a knife to expose the traces.
  3. 0201 are very hard to work with.
View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console Repairbyv1605

Series X Ceramic Cap Value

Picked up this Series X to do a trace repair for the hdmi, turns out 2 caps were ripped off the board as well. The one was still partially connected and easy to bodge. The second circled is missing. I'm curious if anyone knows the replacement value.

The similar caps in the area all read between 18.6 to 19.6 uf when out of circuit, so it could be a few values (though no guarantee this cap wasn't unique and completely different).

View original on lemmy.world
consolerepair·Console RepairbyAmanda

Slim PlayStation 2 optical drive swap trouble

I have a nice pink (slim) PS2 with a broken optical drive that I’m trying to fix. I have a replacement drive that has an identical code to the broken one and that visually looks identical except that one of the ribbon cables is longer. I put it in following the instructions from iFixit, but the new drive does not seem to spin up (though it does move the read head, it sound like).

I put the old drive back and try again, with the same result. This is surprising because the previous drive could read CDs (PS1 games) but not DVDs, so I fixed it worse than it was before.

Does anyone have suggestions for where to start troubleshooting? What could have possibly gone wrong to cause this?

View original on aggregatet.org
consolerepair·Console RepairbyDarthBueller

Dead DSi XLs - Repair failure - Question

I recently replaced power connectors on two DSi XLs. Both couldn’t charge, and one worked on the battery while the other didn’t. I replaced the connectors and a dead charging circuit fuse on one of them (only one dead fuse).

Now both are dead, and one only has an orange flashing light like the power fuse is burnt when plugged in, while the other is just … no life.

New Power connectors all beep out just fine for continuity. All fuses beep out just fine. All ribbon cables are seated.

What the hell did I do or fail to do? Any guesses? My soldering was accurate, no stray touches, etc. Just wondering if there’s a common other issue that I might have overlooked beyond power connector & fuse replacement.

View original on lemmy.world