This SNES was found at value village for $8. Can we fix it? originally posted to tiktok. follow me on TT, IG and Twitter! linktr.ee/videogamerestoration
I remember when I could walk by someone's house & be able to tell when their tube TVs were turned on... from the squeal alone. Nice repair & clean job, btw!
@@bradtouchton4816 public education needs at least 30 desoldering & soldering station each worth $17.99... teaching children how to easily replace cell phone motherboards & power sources, because humans will all carry shit like that in the future 🤷Welcome🤷to🤷Portland🤷
@@JetSetSixDeuce public education needs at least 30 desoldering & soldering station each worth $17.99... teaching children how to easily replace cell phone motherboards & power sources, because we will all carry shit like that in the future 🤷Welcome🤷to🤷Portland🤷
The fact that you look like McCauley Culkin and do retro gaming is a nostalgia overload! I absolutely love your channel and would love more long videos.
public education needs at least 30 desoldering & soldering station each worth $17.99... teaching children how to easily replace cell phone motherboards & power sources, because humans will all carry shit like that in the future 🤷Welcome🤷to🤷Portland🤷
I bought one a few weeks ago online for 75$ and it came super dirty and destryed on the back. Somehow, it still works, but there is a lot of cleaning to do on that bad boy haha
For testing absolutely not plus they are cheap. If you ohm it and the resistance between ground and +v is not really low immediately you will probably be fine.
@@melody3741 Yeah but if the fuse was blown it means something has gone wrong, and if that hasn't been fixed before shorting the fuse then it's a guaranteed console blow up lol It's always bad practice to bypass a blown fuse, unless you checked the whole board and fixed what was wrong already.
I've been getting crazy deals on"broken"systems that just need a good cleaning and they work fine! I got a decent tool kit for repairs and so far have spent $40 and got 2 PSones, 2PSXs,1 backwards compat fat boy ps3, 2 ps3 slims, 1ps3 super slim, Xbox 360 and a DS lite 🤯
I'm allowed to make this cruel and totally obscure reference about his physical appearance because I have the exact same "haircut" and doubt anyone is even going to know what I'm talking about.
I just recently got a snes from my cousin's dad and I want to retrobright it. I still have to buy a gamebit screwdriver and the other retrobright supplies, but I'm excited to do it! Let's save the consoles!
I have a garage full of broken SNES still from when I used to restore them. I haven't set up my work bench since I moved which is why I say used to. SNES first console I started messing with.
@@VideoGameRestoration Yeah, I had a goal to make a portable SNES , and GameCube but never did it. I did some pretty decent repairs, but I've fallen out of the hobby. I want to get back into it at some point. Thanks for the content, and for your reply.
The SNES' secondary tv output is compatible with the GameCube's video cable. I know because that's how I was hooking the SNES I had at the time to my tv.
The only bad thing about soldering is when I forget to make sure it placed back the correct way back. I usually do forget and end up with a burnt table....
Nice work! I feel like the power port probably still worked like that (unless it shorted (maybe that's what blew the fuse)) because it only has like two points of contact. Also, as long as that's actually a fuse most any fuse rated for the same amperage should work.
That is one of my favorite retro games like that is my honest first memory of playing any game was zombies on sega and I got it for the switch recently but I’m getting a cib for my sega
My dad found a old Pokémon game boy color from the back of our yard. It had Pokémon gold in it and I think I’ll try and restore it for fun. It is full of mud and even had plants growing out.