seeing this gave me remotivation for solidering projects again, great vid! super impressive. I can't even do a 1/10th of what you do at 18 lol out of curiosity, was this all out of pocket for you?
I'm so glad to hear that! Practice makes perfect, and believe me, it's not all too hard once you get the hang of the basics. And no, it wasn't out of pocket for me. James paid for both the shipping and the modkit.
Awesome video, thanks! So I've decided to start a NES rgb toaster project. A lot of thinking and massive amounts of work have gone into it, and I am still not anywhere near half-way done. It is a huge project, but I am trying to do it the right way; no hot glue, actually no glue at all. All pieces are custom made pieces that can be bolted on or snapped into place. I might make a video of it once it is done and upload it.
Hab mir num meine ersten Karten gekauft. Diese Symbole wie Stern, Kreis und Verreck sind bei mir unten links und nicht rechts??? Und es ist ein gemischte Pack, wie weiss ich welche Karte zu welchem Set gehört?
Not really, but I assume it was some sort of configuration issue with his capture card that sort of misinterpreted the output, since the HDMI signal from the console worked just fine when I tested it and he managed to fix it quickly in the next episode once people pointed it out
Da ich mich mehr für das Spiel als für das Sammeln interessiere und ich die Karten ziemlich teuer finde während des Studiums, reicht mir vollkommen das Online-Spiel. Hat sogar den Vorzug, dass man IMMER jemanden zum Spielen und Tauschen hat und die Karten sich beim Spielen nicht abnutzen
I honestly just rewatched the fabled Nintoaster Instructional Video that I like to revisit every so often. And to my surprise this was right underneath it in the search. I knew that the AVGN's had broken and that he had it repaired and upgraded, but I assumed it was from a professional modder and not a fan, so this was a special surprise! I loved this video, the good, the bad, everything. I will be revisiting this one from now on too, good work!
Thank you very much, it means a lot to me! I was also very surprised by how much trust James put into pretty much just a stranger on the internet with no portfolio to speak of when I sent him the initial offer. Oh, and as a sidenote: I'll actually be going professional with modding services soon. Doing mods like these is simply a lot of fun after all.
This goes for anyone I guess, but where should I start if I want to get into electronics? I want to build by own Nintoaster in the future. Additionally, I thought you also modded it to play PS2 games, or was that a joke the nerd said?
I can't speak for everyone, but personally I got into electronics by doing basically what's in the video: Just tinkering around with random devices, trying to understand how they work, fixing things and eventually doing some mods. It helps a lot if you get the basics of the matter down, pretty much what you'd learn in physics class. Voltage, current, resistance, capacity, what kind of electrical components are there and what do they do, how to read and draw simple circuit diagrams, using a multimeter, and so on. Practice soldering and tinker with some simple devices that are easy to understand, try fixing some devices that are broken. As long as you're doing something you're on the right track, it's all just a matter of experience. Building a Nintoaster also isn't all that hard, just takes some understanding of what you're working with and inginuity to make it work. Oh, and about the PS2-capability, that was indeed just a joke.
@@Prismary Alright awesome, that's exactly what I've been doing so I'll keep it up as well as try to get a better understanding of the basics and of each component with whatever I'm working on. I'll study how to read and draw circuit diagrams, so thank you! Who knows, maybe I'll build the first Nintoaster III that will have PS2 compatibility if that's even possible.
@@camerickoo4333 I wouldn't say it's impossible, however the PS2 mainboard is quite big so you'd have some serious difficulty trying to make it fit into a toaster shell. You could however align the disk drive in a similar fashion to how the cartridge port is mounted in the Nintoaster, so it'd look pretty cool.
It's really impressive how far people like Kevtris who really know what they're doing can take a simple modkit. It's just unfortunate it's been sold out everywhere for ages now because some chips have reached end-of-life so the board needs a bit of re-engineering
wow owo amazing lol, good job helping him fix that, i have no idea how cutting and gluing parts together somehow fixed it.. I don't even know how one can know what all those pins do.. i'd be afraid to break it just by touching it xD you're pretty talented.