Building a custom NES power adapter - NES Restoration [Part 1]
Ғылым және технология
Not many consoles are as classic as the NES (not even the NES Classic). Take a dive with me into an NES whose working condition is completely unknown! Was it a waste of money or a surprisingly good deal? Let's find out!
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▶MUSIC USED
CORE - mr spock's cryo-bed
xylo and cerror - sea side blues (xyce.bandcamp.com/)
DualTrax - orion crackmusic
Graff - rain eater
BRD Keygen #4
Пікірлер: 412
4:37 Ah, yes, the Australian power outlets. I love how they look; they always remind me of _The Scream_ by Edvard Munch.
@alastorlapid2365
3 жыл бұрын
This image is never leaving my head.
@HmmYT
2 жыл бұрын
Being an Australian, I can most certainly say that, yes it does look like that.
That Mario cartridge is quite rare! They didn’t make many and it’s a 5 screw version which means it is a very very early cartridge - Nintendo quickly switched to the special tamper-resistant three-screw version. Also, in the USA Nintendo quickly made a combination Super Mario / Duck Hunt combo cartridge and thusly discontinued the single Super Mario game. 😀
@nathansdump5583
Жыл бұрын
😮 how interesting
@johnsimpsen5
Жыл бұрын
Dang, I have the Mario only nes game, is that rare?
@maxrichards5925
Жыл бұрын
@@johnsimpsen5 I would say not really. I would think that many people had that release, but it may go for slightly more than a Mario / Duck hunt cart since that sounds like it was a bit more common. I’ve usually seen the Duck hunt cart more often than a standalone Mario cart.
@OfficialBirdClipStudios
Жыл бұрын
I found it while scanning through the basement and almost smashed my foot but I’m fine ;)
@OfficialBirdClipStudios
Жыл бұрын
Nvm they have a lot on eBay but 80 bucks are higher :/
That "NTSC Great Britain" joke killed me like Windows 10 kills my system resources.
@superJK92
3 жыл бұрын
Ikr
@Infevlol
3 жыл бұрын
whoever sees this and the "flixzone" replies then flixzone is fake, its made just to steal your data
@NepgearGM6.1
2 жыл бұрын
I share the same opinion on Windows 10
@barneycalhoun6007
2 жыл бұрын
xd
@isaacandersen1
2 жыл бұрын
You should try downgrading to windows ME or Vista, much more stable and consumes far fewer resources.
"I sure hope this is what I hope it is!" -MattKC, 1985
@thehexedhydra
Жыл бұрын
That joke had me ROLLING
@thetechsavvy01
Ай бұрын
Was he really alive in 1985? He seems too baby-faced to be that old
Highly underrated channel. I'm very happy I found it. Please make more technology videos! :)
@v0lts
5 жыл бұрын
was just about to comment this. Very very underrated.
@Sarah-hs8ir
5 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@goldenfreddy4122
4 жыл бұрын
That's American Version of Nintendo Entertainment system in United Kingdom United States America fly to United Kingdom ✈
@lelouchlemprouge6380
2 жыл бұрын
I subscribed after i saw QR code video I mean it's a channel full of nostalgia
@BritVinylBoy
2 жыл бұрын
Mmhm!
Be careful with a Japanese Famicom! It has no such rectifier! I fried my Famicom by using a Genesis power supply.
@AlexS-sc3gb
3 жыл бұрын
I guess Americans do it better!
@AlexS-sc3gb
3 жыл бұрын
Tolly Hill Its a joke
@SpartanViper7Edits
3 жыл бұрын
oof, that sucks. did you get it repaired?
@kishannathan4186
3 жыл бұрын
@@SpartanViper7Edits its fried
@stingertv7363
3 жыл бұрын
@@TollyH weeb lol
The cartridge literally says "some games" lmao
How that NES didn't explode upon plugging it in, I have no idea. Definitely will be waiting for that part 2.
Also a wire brush can solve the corroded pins issue.
@dani.munoz.a23
3 жыл бұрын
There’s a second video, the problem is already solved. It’s too late.
@glitchenz
3 жыл бұрын
Just bend the pins put a game in it and wiggle it and it works (for me) first try
@xp8969
3 жыл бұрын
Just smack it against your open palm or throw it against a wall if that doesn't work, those were always my 2nd and 3rd steps to troubleshoot a non-working game if blowing in it didn't work first
@harrisonsmith6669
3 жыл бұрын
Wouldnt that possibly damage them further
@deltacx1059
3 жыл бұрын
@@harrisonsmith6669 if you use a steel brush, it's best to use the softer metal brushes and be gentle.
6:45 As a brit, i can tell you that is a British moth
@boodro2122
3 жыл бұрын
Wrong. It's a cockroach. No doubt, a relative of the queen.
@Kyoki_Electric
2 жыл бұрын
It looks like a grasshopper but I am Aussie not Brit so idk
The reason why most DC electronics don't use rectifiers is because rectifiers contain diodes, which represent a power loss. They waste power in the form of heat, and they can waste a lot of heat. You can boil water using a diode passing too much current.
@Mizuotter
4 ай бұрын
Ah yes, love that
@robonator2945
4 ай бұрын
I mean, you can boil water using a copper wire and passing too much current
8-bit guy quality content, im glad i found ur chanel !
@jscorpio1987
4 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing!
@blueraspberryjuice516
4 жыл бұрын
Dude you guys are NOOBS HA I KNEW IT!
@jscorpio1987
4 жыл бұрын
Blue raspberry Juice wtf are you talking about?
@awilliams1701
4 жыл бұрын
with an 8 bit guy clip in it no less.
@PureWar58073
3 жыл бұрын
Ya
Regarding the 72-Pin connector, I fixed mine by bending the pins to make better contact. Worked a treat.
Hi man, just wanted to say that I'm impressed by your video production quality. It has a right mix of jokes, B-roll and voiceovers which makes it very enjoyable to watch. Kind of like LGR (a KZreadr) style, which is very nice. Keep up the good work!
This channel is going to get big. Keep making quality content like this and you won't have any issues getting seen. Just a matter of time!
@ChloekabanOfficial
2 жыл бұрын
He's definitely getting popular - 313,000+ subscribers at the time of writing this comment.
@FarmYardGaming
Жыл бұрын
361K now, but he deserves a million at the very least
@basedSkeleton
Жыл бұрын
How does he not have 1m subs?
@DigitalHandle
8 ай бұрын
416k as of writing, he's close to 500k!
My Florida NES is is just fine. You could say its BOG standard.
@TylerFurrison
2 жыл бұрын
Note, any NES not labeled "Florida" will have rust issues when inserted into a BOG
2:09 -- LMFAO I see what you did there
@SpringPath76521
4 жыл бұрын
I realized this when I read you're comment.
@abbyelectric
3 жыл бұрын
Genius
In my experience, you can salvage the existing 72-pin connector by gently bending the pins. Once done properly, the cartridge should feel firm and snug when pushed in, not loose. It can take a bit of patience, and some trial and error, but it works.
0:04 love the way he said "oh boy!" here lmao
Awesome video! I love your presentation and humor, not only on this video but on your others too (the training videos had me in stitches). I'm not sure how I found your channel but I'm glad I did!
This was the first model of NES i played back in the day. Got my first NES in 2010 and it was the front loader and i started to have issues getting tames to work due to the 72 pin connector wear and tear. Last year i bought an AV stereo modded top loader and its a great improvement. Great video guy.
Sometimes in the zif ( that's the cartridge slot ) the pins are bent down (the springy side ) you can bend them back with exacto knife and clean the pins with 800 grit sandpaper on something thin (like a guitar pick or thin piece of plastic) ..... is the tv flashing a color or is it not flashing at all ? oh love the video ..
@Porygonal64
3 жыл бұрын
it's technically not a zif since you push the cartridge into place :v
@yardbirds89
3 жыл бұрын
@@Porygonal64 . it's just what Nintendo calls it..its like a hybrid zif
@PuffyRainbowCloud
3 жыл бұрын
It's better to boil the connector.
I love retro games/systems and watching you restore them is intriguing and very relaxing. Your videos are awesome; thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise. Easy sub.
6:25 -- wow. Talk about a COMPUTER BUG... yukyukyuk Also, there's yer problem, lady! -- Eric O.
I know this is an ancient video, but for posterity: AC is usually measured in RMS, so multiply by 1.414 for peak when rectifying, then subtract two diode drops from the rectifier (typically 0.6V * 2). 9VAC becomes more like 11.5VDC. If you input DC, then you can skip the first part and just subtract the diode drops. Fortunately, in my limited understanding of the NES, much of it runs off a 5V regulator, which requires around 7V input as minimum.
Woah I see one of your vids was getting pushed, and now 4K subs! Hell yeah man! Always loved your content. Now YT is showing love. Anyways, great video. Never thought I’d see anyone try to do this to an NES. Very cool and creative Matt.
I restored an NES with my dad a few months ago, and we went through nearly the same as you. We just bought a new slot and cleaned everything else a little.
That bug in the cartridge slot reminds me of the PS2 I bought off ebay as "for parts/not working", intending to use it as a donor for parts for my childhood PS2. Once I received it, I swiftly went to opening it up to grab parts only to be met by an absolute infestation of dead bugs. All the bug guts were rusting the metal shielding. Turns out the parts weren't compatible with my specific model revision, so I just chucked the shielding into a tub of vinegar, left it for a few days, started scrubbing, and it started up and read games just fine. Now that PS2 is the one I still use to this day. Reselient little thing it is.
The blinking light issue on the NES, if the game loads pressing the RESET button allows it to remain on solid. I rarely needed to clean my carts and those that did require cleaning were those that were blown into. The corrosion found on the pins connectors on most NES consoles can be attributed to that malpractice. How they were stored, that's a different story. The game would work but early on I am sure many of us must have stopped doing that especially if you got scolded by vendors at your local flea market. I annoyed the heck out of them when commenting about that. Even back then during the early 90's, we were told to keep the pins on the carts clean and not to blow into them. We never listened. I just wanted to play the game, but eventually all learn the hard way thinking out brains are all big and all during that age. Yeah right.
imagine living in the era in the NES, getting your first NES. man, id be excited NOW to get an nes
The “Happy Birthday” paper makes the beginning skit.
MattKC I'm the kid who makes that video of alcohol 5 years ago! 😁 I was too young and didn't know that there is a warning about using them hahahaha. Sorry for my ignorance at that time.
@chamber_hiro256
3 жыл бұрын
Holy I thought you were an impersonator for a second.
I am from your last video, I love this type of stuff, keep it up :) Keep tinkering away!
You matched the 8 Bit Guy style _perfectly._
Hey there matt! Something to try is put your finger on the not h of the cartridge and give it a good wiggle. If you see the startup screen flashing, then press the reset button. This revived my NES
That bug looks identical to an English house moth, we get tons of them here.
I appreciate the use of the sloppy opening clip in 5:28. Also you blue balled me, I was expecting to hear the satisfying sound of the cartridge being inserted but it never came :(
0:23 he's playing some game's
I used to play on the nes when I was like 5, it was so much fun
There are a lot of US Military personnel in the UK and it's not really that rare to encounter electronics from "the wrong region", usually with the required transformer as part of the package.
0:06 This moment when you see that your wrapping paper for your brother has a "Happy Birthday" on it
man I love your videos
I power my PAL NES with a 9V guitar pedal powersupply. I just twisted and elec-taped the proper connector to the cable and it works like charm 😅
4:20 Behold,the glory of the FOOOOL BRIDGE RECTIFIER! (To quote Electroboom.) They're nifty devices. Because of them,some devices are like the honey badger,they don't care,just feed them the approx. correct voltage,AC,DC,either polarity,It'll take care of the rest.
"Even using the infamous "blowing the cartridge" technique." -MattKC
If the humidity in florida doesn't ruin it, the ocean breeze will! Hope you like missing clear coat on your cars!
@thomasvlaskampiii6850
4 жыл бұрын
Don't forget about Florida Man attacking the NES with a butter knife because he lost The Game
I have before powered my NES using an SNES power adaptor!
@dustin202
3 жыл бұрын
Well thanks for the information
1:27 nes camouflage
_"This Nintendo console has seen some sh*t. It might rob you in a back alley."_ 🤣
What a wholesome video. I like this guy. Give him a cookie.
Month: christmas Wrapping paper :Happy Bday!
Awesome to see solder and a DMM from Dick smith electronics!
Great content ! Subbed.
I wish NESes could talk now, because I need to sit down and listen to this one's story.
music at 1:04 is Akumajo Dracula - Vampire Killer (X68000)
6:10 yes it was kept in an extremely humid environment called great britain, which is where the rain goes when irish people wish for it to go away (ireland is where the rain goes when anyone else wishes for rain to go away.)
Awesome video!
OH MAN I NEED SECOND PART
OMG The 8-Bit Guy is one of my favorite KZreadrs
cool content man, keep it going.
I love these videos
Your toothbrush and rubbing alcohol will clean the ports pins and use an old pink eraser on the motherboard pins where the connector slides on. its usually all that's needed but if it still doesn't work, you can, as someone suggested, bend the pins (you only need to bend the top pins, the bottom ones should be fine). If you bend the pins you shouldn't be required to push the cartridge down when you play any longer, you can just slide the cart in and turn it on and it should work. You can also try this without bending the pins, after a clean, to see if it will play. I have been doing this since the 80's and never need to push my game down and it works like new 100% every time and I've had my console since '86, so long as the game is cleaned (I use an eraser on my games contacts). I've been using this method long before youtube was invented and everyone I know that I've done this to their NES, their system still works flawlessly and without having to push their games down.
Now that you live in the US, that means that this NES has made a journey across nearly the whole world.
Loved the music gave me a nostalgic feeling when I was in my teens, what is the title of the tune?
when my friend got an NES with the same issues, i got it up and running for him. looking up solutions online, i boiled the connector in water as a way of cleaning it, then i went and got a hook of some kind (can't remember what i used) and bent the pins back in place so they'd make good contact. after that the system worked without any issues
Nintendo had the transformer outside the box to get around regulations for a device that would have high voltages. And so the AC adapter was just the transformer outside the box. All voltage regulation was inside the NES. It can take a range of voltages; the official adapter produced 10.5 volts AC when I tested it way back when, so 9.3 here isn't high at all.
Lol. “Oh wow a Nintendo Entertainment System from Nintendo maker of entertainment systems!” Bro 😂
You are so interesting to watch, please make more retro tech videos
The NES was wrapped in a happy birthday wrapper
This reminds me of all the times I took my NES apart. Then you learn about bent pins that you could push back. DAMN YOU NINTENDO
The beginning reminds me of how our grandma nes broke i hope i can fix it
1985: Nintendo releases NES 1986: Катастрофа в ЧАЭС
I love your videos, they are ridiculous.
Have fun with the nes. Also had never one but got it like 15 years ago with a four score ect.
music: Christmas wrap: Birthday
This is the second video I've seen of yours now talking about the NES AC input. I'm not sure if you're just ignoring it for time or simplicity, or if you don't know, but the voltage rating of an AC power supply is in volts RMS. When you rectify that to DC you don't end up with a DC voltage equal to the AC RMS voltage, you get the AC voltage multiplied by the square root of 2, minus the forward voltage drop of the rectifier diodes. TL:DR The NES runs on 12VDC internally, not 9VDC. It'll probably work fine on 9VDC, but a 12V DC power supply would be closer to the original power source.
The NES lock-out chip blinking problem is generally caused by mis-aligned pins (not dirty pins). Alcohol is fairly useless (although it doesn't hurt anything). Blowing on the cartridge is fairly useless (although you may put it the cart back in with correct alignment, and it works). Replacing the cartridge slot is also fairly useless. Hitting your NES as hard as you can so that the cartridge pops out, and then re-inserting the cart will work (but just don't). The best technique is the wiggle: 1. Insert the cartridge 2. Power on If the power blinks on and off: 3. wiggle the cartridge slowly from side to side until garbled graphics appear 4. Press the reset button Enjoy!!!
I can't wait to play some games! Inserts cartridge labeled "some games:
"I sure hope this is what i hope it is"
Dude did a better refurbishing job than DK oldies
Nice content!
Yeah...Happy Birthday on Christmas... it's like me offering gift cards, that has a married couple on them, to my family. XD
Congrats on reinventing TipExchange.
Crt: u ok bro nes: i see the light
I just realised that the "Christmas gift" is wrapped in obviously birthday-themed paper.
My C64 II can also run on 9VAC/5VDC and 9VDC/5VDC and my problem was that the original power brick from the C64 was broken it puts out over 15VAC/9VDC so i just used an old ATX power supply and installed a 9V DC/DC converter and soldered on the cable from the broken PSU and it worked like a charm. Another good thing is that I can power the C64 and the Floppy Drive with this one ATX PSU.
4:15 there are two main reasons why gadgets don’t typically use bridge rectifiers on their power inputs: 1. added cost; 2. power losses. In a bridge rectifier, the power always flows through two diodes, so you have two diode voltage drops (2x0.7V=1.4V). So whatever current the device draws, you get that much power lost as heat in the diodes. (For example, if the device draws 0.5A, then it will waste 0.5Ax1.4V=0.7W of power in the diodes.) On an AC adapter, this wouldn’t really matter, but it’d be terrible on battery (where a bridge rectifier could theoretically be used to allow batteries to be inserted either way). So given that the power brick is typically included with the device, manufacturers prefer to just say “USE ONLY WITH SUPPLIED AC ADAPTER”, save the cost of the bridge rectifier, and just ensure the device and power brick are designed for each other. Nintendo is a bit of an outlier, in that they tend to design their stuff to be nearly indestructible. In this case, they clearly just have all of the power supply regulation circuitry in the console itself (whereas most modern stuff has it entirely in the power brick), and used an inexpensive AC wall wart that’s just a transformer and nothing else. Rectification, smoothing, and regulation is all done in the console, and it doesn’t mind being fed DC instead of AC.
Over time the NES cartridge pins get bent out of shape from pushing the cartridge down. It is pretty easy to get a small flat blade screw driver under the pins to bend them back up. This will let the cartridge make better contact with the connector. I've fixed an NES this way before, no replacement slot needed.
That's some game! I bet that burn is from a cigarette.
We had an NES^^ But only a few games, like Mario Bros, a Legend of Zelda Game and Lolo.
I watched 22 seconds of your video, and I was like wow you aged well lol. Its been over 30 years, and you still look like your 17 years old. Whats your secret? Ok lets keep watching. Btw love your videos.
@Devilmonkey6674
2 жыл бұрын
He’s like 20
Matt sounds like he’s being held at gunpoint in the intro ngl
1:24 you mean hell on earth
Ahh man. You never experienced picking up the controller, grabbing it by the cord, swinging it around as fast as possible like a scooter kid at a skate park and cracking your best friend in the side of the head with the god awful sharp corners of the controller?! 🤣🤣 Those were the days!!
Love how he uses keygen music.
Speaking from experience, the old slot would still work had you bent the pins as they just bend with use and bending them back into position fixes it, corrosion is not a problem really.
Strange fact, the hard wired ring doorbell takes 24v AC? People were complaining that the adapter didn’t show which was positive as you have to fix bare wires round screws on the back of the unit. It’s the first digital device I’ve ever seen that uses an AC power adapter.
oh man i love blowing the cartridge
Okay. I subscribed 10 seconds in due to that intro.
Is that a common spot for the NES case to break or do you have my lockout chip modded NES that I sold with no RF shield inside?
@Lilithe
3 жыл бұрын
Definitely not lockout modded :D