Famicom (not Mini) build (WIP)
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Love the expansion chambers on the exhaust! Getting ready to rebuild a tomos bottom end with am airsal top end!
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Ah nice! treatland.tv has a lot parts for Tomos.
If you live in the US then it is reasonable to shop there. -
Yeah they just had a sale that I took advantage of!
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17% off sale! ;-)
I buy mostly small parts like jets and other spare parts for my PHBG Dellorto carbs. Shipping is costly if I order larger parts.
I am working on my next engine at the moment; Aerox engine cases, 13inch Aerox wheels, Roost 70cc cylinder (liquid cooled) with matching Roost pipe, 28mm PWK Keihin carb.... that is gonna be a beast on that light Jog frame.
Anyways I could talk all day long here about scooters and engines but this is a RetroPie forum so I should keep it limited to RPi and Emulators.
If you look for a nice cozy place to talk about grease monkey stuff just check out this forum here, great people and lots and lots of good info around in the tech section. -
Looks like the Ferrite ring won the race.
Got it today. Still no Mausberry, after 1 month and 1 week. Guess it is time to file a claim to PayPal and get the seller to answer or payback. -
@FlyingTomahawk That really stinks. I hope they make things right for you. If you don't make any headway, let me know and I can see about ordering one to have it sent to my house, and then I can send it on over to Japan.
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Thanks.
Let's see what PayPal can do first. -
So after I filed a claim through PayPal guess what.
I received a shipping confirmation that the Mausberry was shipped yesterday, April 15.
When I placed the order it was clearly saying in stock. Because I applied for a notification as soon the item is available.
I kinda have the feeling that my order was forgotten and if I never would have filed a claim through PayPal I would never have received the shipping confirmation.Well, it sucks big time but let's hope now that the circuit arrives as quick as possible so that I can finally build the Famicom.
Kinda disappointed though, didn't receive any apology for the delay which was over a month!
He/they can consider them lucky to have such a unique product otherwise they would be very quick out of business. Someone should create a similar poduct and do a better job. -
@FlyingTomahawk I have to wonder how complex that circuit is. It can't be doing a whole lot. If someone made a DIY set of instructions on how to make one yourself I'd be all about it.
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@FlyingTomahawk said in Famicom (not Mini) build (WIP):
Mausberry
from the looks of it, its just a push switch onto the GPIO pins to shut the pie down with a script, and then a chip thats cutting off the power supply via the passthrough.
Im fairly sure you could do this with an arduino, a push switch and an hours coding.
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@spruce_m00se said in Famicom (not Mini) build (WIP):
@FlyingTomahawk said in Famicom (not Mini) build (WIP):
Mausberry
from the looks of it, its just a push switch onto the GPIO pins to shut the pie down with a script, and then a chip thats cutting off the power supply via the passthrough.
Im fairly sure you could do this with an arduino, a push switch and an hours coding.
Probably wouldn't even need the hours worth of coding. Mausberry offers the script themselves
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@liquidzoo
I used a powerblock. The space was a bit tight so I had to solder directly to the power block pins on top but I was able to place directly on the pi with no problem and no coding. I just found this thread and o was super happy. I had built a famicom 3pi this last year. I will follow with some pics. I ended up using the 8bitdo famicom styled Bluetooth controllers. They fit perfectly in the built in controller holders with no mods. I purchased the pair labels 1 and 2. Love the build and all my friends are really confused by the console. -
Nice!
Yeah, let's see those pictures, we can use any motivation here.
If you read through this thread here you'll see that I too got the 8bitdo FC30 Player I & II controllers. They fit like a glove.
I have everything setup and configured. The only thing left is that Mausberry circuit.
I want to use that original power switch of the Famicom that is the only reason I kept stand this whole Mausberry ordeal. -
I've been really digging this build log, and I'm looking forward to seeing the finished console . I've been really tempted to do a build like this. I keep watching junk Famicoms on ebay, etc... I think my favorite thing about a Famicom Retropie build is that it keeps track of the controllers. However my least favorite thing is that it only keeps track of two controllers. So I started imagining a 4 controller Famicom. 3D printing is the obvious method to realize something like this. I found this 3D file for a Famicom on Thingiverse, which the creator was generous enough to make GNU GPL CC. I then "remixed" it a bit to come up with this:
I'm not sure if I made enough space for the inner controllers. I'll probably print just a section to try it out first. It is likely going to be a while before I get around to 3D printing it. Otherwise I would have started a build log of my own. I hope you don't mind me posting this here on your thread for now.
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@FlyingTomahawk Sorry it took a bit but here are my pics. I used a control block because I had it but I used the power block setup. Using bluetooth controllers has been an issue in the past with the controller assigning with the control block. I ran into issues when I decided to go wireless on my Pitendo build.
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Its been a while but today I decided to move my ass and get this Famicom build done.
So before putting everything in place I wired up the Mausberry and ran the Mausberry script.
I connect all the cables and adapters and move the switch to ON. Pi Zero powers up nicelly and I can play games and do the usual.
Now I power down the Pi by moving the switch to its OFF position and here is were my trouble starts. When the switch is in OFF mode the Pi keeps rebooting and rebooting in a loop all the time until I move the power switch back to ON and then it shuts down.So what the hell did I do wrong?
Soldered the original Famicom switch to SW + and - and connected the IN and OUT wires to GPIO 23 and 24.
Is there anything else? -
if you instaled a switch script that is meant for a momentary switch and you have latching switch then that is your problem,
a momentary switch will only connect the gpio to ground whilst being pushed, then when you push it again it powers the pi, then shuts down etc,if you used the original power switch then the script wil see it it as though you have the switch pressed all the time.
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Thanks for your reply and help.
I am not so savvy with all this switch stuff. I just installed the setup script that Mausberry offers in their install manual so not sure for what kind of switch that script is. A momentary switch is a switch that has 3 pins (only 2 connected) and a non-momentary switch is a switch like an Arcade stick button from Sanwa? -
@FlyingTomahawk an arcade button is a momentary switch. Both mementary and non momentary can have 2-3 pins. On an arcade momentary button you have n.o. and n.c. Normally open and normally closed. If you wire to the normally open then when you press down it activates. Whe it is depressed (pushed up) it activates the normally closed. Some things require a button being detected pressed when you arent pushing it down. Not very common in an arcade to use the nc.
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