My Pi in a SNES.
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Very nice build, one can never have enough things lighting up.
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Wow, this is nice! In a way it looks a lot like my Super Nintemu because i also made two ports in the front. But i'm curious as to how you mounted the USB ports without screws? That looks really nice and clean!
Hopefully you'll manage to get the power button working, that's a nice asset.
Good luck and i'll keep an eye on your project. ;-)
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@Morph-X thank you so much. As for the ports, i measured the inside of the old controller slots, and made some blueprints/cut files in illustrator cc. The material i use is 10 mm pvc (forex plastic) Then measured the she usb ports and made holes at work w our cutting table. So everything sat pretty tight, using a digital micrometer. Then just added a tiny bit of superglue from my pvc piece to the org loose snes piece. Its rock solid now, but can still pretty easyily be removed if needed. Was super lucky with the grey color. Told the guy at the graffitti store i needed "nintendo grey" and out of a 1000 cans he matched it 99.9 percent ☺️.
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@Morph-X also, if i may ask, i have the original power switch from my snes, incl wires. Could one wire it directly to the gpio "power" pins, or at least wire it trough to the usb power cable? (it looked like you did something like that..)
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I did it as follows:
I hope my poor English is sufficient to give a proper explanation. I connected a micro-USB extension cable to the Raspi's power input. That's of course a female connector on one side and a male connector on the other. Then i stripped a small part of the cable to cut the +5V wire and soldered both ends of it to the pins of the original SNES power switch. So after connecting a power supply, the power only reaches the Raspi when the SNES power button is switched "ON".
Now this has of course some pro's and con's:
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PRO: It's super cheap (an extension cable costs about $3);
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PRO: It's actually way easier and less space consuming than a power block of some sort;
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PRO: With an extension cable like this you're able to create a nice and corresponding female micro-USB port in your SNES case;
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CON: You'll have to use EmulationStation's option to shutdown the Pi instead of a powerblock running a shutdown script or however those things work. I don't mind at all personally, because the option of shutting down is easily accessible through EmulationStation's option menu, but i can imagine one would not settle for a power switch that simply cuts power in an instant.
Hopefully it's clear to you how i did it. If not, let me know so i can elaborate it some more.
Good luck!
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@Morph-X Thanks for the info, I kinda suspected there was some soldering involved.
I dont think my china usb rocker will fit without a lot of hazzle, so i will
probably try to strip the wires and connect directly to the org snes power button, when I get some free time over.
(There something special about the real sound and push-resistance from the snes buttons, gotta have it!)Also, heres a more like-friendly picture, since I have closed some of the holes and got the Led light to look better.
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@Morph-X Heeey.. Im about to try this soldering thing. (finally packed everything out after moveing)
About your power button solution;
Did you remove the red and black wire from the snes power switch and just solderd 1 of the 4 wires
(2 for power and 2 for data inside a usb cable right?) from the usb cable to the "small pcb" thingy that the snes red/black wires was solderd to? Sorry about going on and on, just wanna get it right.. -
Like the lights on the cartridge,nice work.
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Don't be sorry, i'm glad to be of help!
I quickly made a drawing for you, obviously a lot easier than putting it into words. ;-)
This is how i did it. I just cut the white and green wire since data is not needed in this case. Hopefully it's of any use to you. And good luck!
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@Morph-X That is f**kin excellent! Just what I needed. Thank you so much.
I´ll post some pics after Im done. -
@Dipkid just so you know, you should test the wires with a multimeter to verify they are correct. Cheap chinese cables will mix up the red, white, green and black wires.
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@edmaul69 yeah I´v been reading that, thanks for the heads up!
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You're most welcome. edmaul69 is right, you should make sure the wires are not messed up.
Looking forward to your progress!
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Excellent! Very well done and i wish you loads of fun! ;-)
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@dipkid Poor SNES, now it’s just a boring emulation box with input lag and no cart support. I always wonder what people do with the original OEM board. I assume they throw it in the trash since they never mention anything about it.
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