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- Joined
- 9 Aug 2008
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Absolutely class Vince! Great that you fetched it back to life.
I loved my GG when I was a kid but I lent it to a friend and he broke the screen somehow.
I've just been googling as I went down the gameboy route. It was definitely the better console (outside of battery life), suspect it cost a fortune though.
I'd say my original Gameboy was probably my most played console. It was a great birthday when I got it.
No idea what ever happened to it though. Guessing it was thrown out by parents in a house clean.
I've never done much in the way of handheld fixes, other than re-shelling a DS and replacing my PSP's analog stick.
I feel like I've watched hundreds of videos of people fixing things though. Might be fun thing to learn, as the used app here has loads of old stuff on it.
Feel like I'd be rubbish at soldering though, would probably break things worse than before I'd been let loose.
Soldering is easy the trick is use tons of flux. just slap it everywhere! clean your iron often and have some brad available to clean up any mistakes. some tweezers help when doing smd's.
Though my old Antex was an absolute trooper - even a mid-range temperature controlled iron can improve things as well.
Inspired by this thread, I picked up a battered Game Boy Light for just over a tenner of the used app here. Will see if it is salvageable when it arrives.
The Game Gear can be had for about the same, but think that would be biting off more than I can chew going by Vince's work!
So not massively cheap but a console with all the upgrades etc mine now has goes for approx £150 to £200 so I'm likely not out of pocket if I wanted to sell.
Yeah I was only 11 at the time and wasn't going to attempt a repair so I told my friend he had to buy it off me since he broke it.Sounds a bit like my mates one I have here... IF you drop them there is a single glass layer that is about half a cm bigger than the screen both ends (ill grab some pics later), the idea is the cathode tube sends light into that glass layer to illuminate the screen.. its fragile and will break on a drop, wherever it cracks it will take the screen out in that location. The problem is the old screens solder directly to the board and are glued in place holding about 70 pins to the board so a drop in replacement on these just isn't possible, it's best to just remove the high voltage rail entirely but of course it is always risky removing 20 odd components from the main board, you really don't want to get it wrong and some of the parts are very small.
I can't get over how much they sell for! On release they where £99! with carry case and 2 games!
Decent amount of work in the better ones though. Far better screen, and battery life that isn't completely useless!