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Pi inside an eMac G3

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Projects and Themes
piemacemacemac crt hack
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  • R
    rockyhill
    last edited by 8 Jan 2017, 05:13

    Successfully removed logic board from en eMac G3, activated CRT circuit
    with an arduino(actually using the original CRT!!!), wired in a raspberry pi 3 and installed retropie.
    Here's a video of it in action.

    The process took a while but I'm currently documenting it in a wikibook. If you know something else that can help please add to this. Your additions are appreciated!
    https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=How_to_modify_an_eMac_to_use_as_an_external_monitor

    some more videos





    B M 2 Replies Last reply 8 Jan 2017, 06:42 Reply Quote 5
    • B
      backstander @rockyhill
      last edited by backstander 8 Jan 2017, 06:42

      @rockyhill awesome build!

      I agree, high end CRT monitors/TVs do have great color and blacks look their best!

      I've never tried olive oil to oil an old fan but have used all purpose machine oil and copper grease. Those also work pretty well but WD-40 does not work very long.

      Also you should setup a Soft On/Off Circuit because you might kill your OS if you just power it off while it's on. Or you could use a PowerBlock or ControlBlock.

      R 2 Replies Last reply 8 Jan 2017, 06:56 Reply Quote 2
      • R
        rockyhill @backstander
        last edited by 8 Jan 2017, 06:56

        @backstander
        Thanks!
        The way it's set up now, the arduino is always on monitoring button presses. I've been contemplating implementing a soft on/off mechanism by wiring the pi via i2c to the arduino and have the arduino send it a shutdown command before cutting power to it. That's probably a next month thing though.

        It's my first time using olive oil, let see how long it lasts!

        Thanks for the comment!

        M 1 Reply Last reply 8 Jan 2017, 12:01 Reply Quote 1
        • M
          markyh444 @rockyhill
          last edited by 8 Jan 2017, 12:01

          @rockyhill This is very impressive. Good work. Only watched half of the videos coz I've had to go out, but I'll be taking a better look later on.

          Retropie in a NES - Pi 3 with Mausberry circuit shutdown switch wired to buttons and 8bitdo NesPro30 controller
          Retropie in a Saturn Controller - Pi Zero, GPIO controls using DB9 driver
          Retropie in a PSX - Pi3
          https://markyh444.wordpress.com

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • M
            moosepr @rockyhill
            last edited by 8 Jan 2017, 12:05

            @rockyhill that's mega! Getting the old CRT working is a genius move!

            want to get a tft into your project, look no further than here https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/7464/ili9341-tft-screen-guide

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • R
              rockyhill
              last edited by 8 Jan 2017, 13:25

              thanks!
              I just wanted to point out that this is an eMac G4 a two time tired typo on my part.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • R
                rockyhill @backstander
                last edited by 8 Jan 2017, 14:01

                @backstander forgot to give you a 1 up for liking CRTs.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • topic:timeago-later,2 months
                • H
                  harpingon
                  last edited by harpingon 21 Mar 2017, 09:19

                  Is there some reason I'm missing for using arduino for the I2C work instead of doing that with the raspberry pi? Sorry if that sounds like a dumb question @rockyhill

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • topic:timeago-later,about a year
                  • S
                    seffyroff
                    last edited by 27 Mar 2018, 19:37

                    Hey man, what did you use to get the RPi3 HDMI output to VGA? I've seen a few convertor dongles online and was wondering what you used. I'm about to do the same thing here. Got my eMac, my RPi3, my Arduino and am just missing this info I think!

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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