Racket's Saturn mod chip

Need help with your PC or Modding Projects?
User avatar
D.D.D.
Next-Gen
Posts: 3326
Joined: Tue Oct 16, 2007 11:33 am
Location: of the Estrecho de Gibraltar is where now?
Contact:

Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by D.D.D. »

For those who have the chip and sucessfully modded their Saturn, who did the A-B trick and who did the pin-14 solder?
I'm just trying to see which one has the higher success rate before I try soldering for the first time... :shock:
 (FC, AVFC, NES, SFC x2, SNES, N64, GC x2, Wii x2)*(G&W x7, GB, GBpocket, GBASP, DS-L x2)
(GEN, SS x3, DC x3)*(PCE-Duo)*(Xbox:500GB)*(NGCDZ, NGPC)*(PS1, PStwo, PS3:160GB, PSP.3K)
Hatta
Next-Gen
Posts: 4030
Joined: Tue May 06, 2008 8:33 pm

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by Hatta »

I bridged A-B, worked great.
We are prepared to live in the plain and die in the plain!
Curlypaul
Next-Gen
Posts: 1693
Joined: Tue Sep 18, 2007 4:25 pm
Location: UK - Dudley

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by Curlypaul »

I have a 64 pin saturn and I used the A+B bridging method just fine.

If it doesnt work I reckon it will be easier to desolder the modchip than desolder the tiny pins on the board.
User avatar
andymol21
64-bit
Posts: 490
Joined: Sat Mar 15, 2008 6:55 pm
Location: Birmingham, UK

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by andymol21 »

32 pin, did the AB connector by just wrapping the wire round and plugging the power supply in, no soldering at all. Works fine for me.
--=We Do What We Must Because We Can=--

FS/FT Thread: http://www.racketboy.com/forum/viewtopi ... 11#p309811
User avatar
D.D.D.
Next-Gen
Posts: 3326
Joined: Tue Oct 16, 2007 11:33 am
Location: of the Estrecho de Gibraltar is where now?
Contact:

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by D.D.D. »

Curlypaul wrote:I have a 64 pin saturn and I used the A+B bridging method just fine.

If it doesnt work I reckon it will be easier to desolder the modchip than desolder the tiny pins on the board.
That does sound quite logical and well, sound.
Also, I'm going to be doing this on a Japanese Saturn... Anyone use the chip on a J-Saturn?
 (FC, AVFC, NES, SFC x2, SNES, N64, GC x2, Wii x2)*(G&W x7, GB, GBpocket, GBASP, DS-L x2)
(GEN, SS x3, DC x3)*(PCE-Duo)*(Xbox:500GB)*(NGCDZ, NGPC)*(PS1, PStwo, PS3:160GB, PSP.3K)
User avatar
disorderlyvision
128-bit
Posts: 560
Joined: Mon Aug 04, 2008 1:04 pm

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by disorderlyvision »

i soldered. works great!
User avatar
Ziggy
Moderator
Posts: 14913
Joined: Mon Jun 09, 2008 5:12 pm
Location: NY

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by Ziggy »

D.D.D. wrote:For those who have the chip and sucessfully modded their Saturn, who did the A-B trick and who did the pin-14 solder?
I'm just trying to see which one has the higher success rate before I try soldering for the first time... :shock:
If this is your first time soldering, then maybe you'll wanna practice on something else first. I soldered mine, but I have a lot of experience in soldering.

And if you go the solder route (which is always better then using 'tape tricks' and such) the paper trick in Racket's guide is a really good way to single out a single pin on the chip. If you don't do something like that, its almost impossible to solder a single pin, they're almost microscopic!
User avatar
D.D.D.
Next-Gen
Posts: 3326
Joined: Tue Oct 16, 2007 11:33 am
Location: of the Estrecho de Gibraltar is where now?
Contact:

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by D.D.D. »

Ziggy587 wrote:
D.D.D. wrote:For those who have the chip and sucessfully modded their Saturn, who did the A-B trick and who did the pin-14 solder?
I'm just trying to see which one has the higher success rate before I try soldering for the first time... :shock:
If this is your first time soldering, then maybe you'll wanna practice on something else first. I soldered mine, but I have a lot of experience in soldering.

And if you go the solder route (which is always better then using 'tape tricks' and such) the paper trick in Racket's guide is a really good way to single out a single pin on the chip. If you don't do something like that, its almost impossible to solder a single pin, they're almost microscopic!
I don't really have anything else like circuit boards etc, what else could I practice on?
Also, could you perhaps give me a bit more info on the paper trick? I read that in the guide but might you have a picture or just a bit more info on that (as it is my first time)?
 (FC, AVFC, NES, SFC x2, SNES, N64, GC x2, Wii x2)*(G&W x7, GB, GBpocket, GBASP, DS-L x2)
(GEN, SS x3, DC x3)*(PCE-Duo)*(Xbox:500GB)*(NGCDZ, NGPC)*(PS1, PStwo, PS3:160GB, PSP.3K)
User avatar
Ziggy
Moderator
Posts: 14913
Joined: Mon Jun 09, 2008 5:12 pm
Location: NY

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by Ziggy »

I'll see if I can upload a picture later, but basically you single out one pin of the chip using paper. I used standard computer paper, ripped it into quarters. Stick a peice of paper on each side of the pin you want to solder, this way you almost garuntee you only touch that pin.

I don't know if you looked at the pins yet, but they're very small and very close together, so unless you have the steadiest hand/arm in the world and you're looking at it under a magnifying glass, you're gonna have trouble.

The problem is, you don't want to accidently bridge a connection between two pins on the chip because then nothing will work, and it could possible damage something. By singling out the one pin using the paper trick it makes it very easy to get the job done, and vastly lessens the chance of bridging a connection between two pins.
Curlypaul
Next-Gen
Posts: 1693
Joined: Tue Sep 18, 2007 4:25 pm
Location: UK - Dudley

Re: Racket's Saturn mod chip

Post by Curlypaul »

If youve never soldered before then read a couple of guides and have a practise using some speaker wire and some PCB's out of something broken. It not really that difficult to get the wire to stick to something but if you can get that nailed before you attempt to solder those pins, then its one less thing to worry about when you are trying to hold that iron steady.

btw, is that saturn a 64 or 32 pin?
Post Reply