Nope, masterkirby beat you to it. All you need is 2 AA's and a photo capacitor. (I'm building one tomorrow and fixing shakespeare's pokemon red )PalmerTech said:Or, do it the right way and use a home made spot welder. Do I need to add that to my list of tuts to make?
Tomorrow I have to go to church, but the rest of the day shall be tut making day!
bah, gameboy games only need electrical tape. THere's not enough room for the battery to go anywhere.eurddrue said:Nope, masterkirby beat you to it. All you need is 2 AA's and a photo capacitor. (I'm building one tomorrow and fixing shakespeare's pokemon red )PalmerTech said:Or, do it the right way and use a home made spot welder. Do I need to add that to my list of tuts to make?
Tomorrow I have to go to church, but the rest of the day shall be tut making day!
WHAAAAT!? So both of you guys just take the new battery and tape it it? What keeps it from sliding off of the contacts?themadhacker said:I only ever use tape in my gameboy games. Seems noobish, but with some sturdy duct tape, it'll hold up.
have you see the amount of space there is in a gameboy cartridge? In any other application I'd have gone with something more professional such as a ghetto spot-welder, but the cart-case itself provides enough pressure to ensure nothings going anywhere. The battery would have to move quite a distance in order to get away from the tabs, and that just isn't gonna happen in that confined space.bacteria said:Using tape may lose contact with the terminals after a while, yes?