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 redPalmerTech 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 redPalmerTech 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?