i inserted and took the game out when it was still wet yes, but i didnt let it dry.
i inserted and took the game out when it was still wet yes, but i didnt let it dry.
What's up with islands? Get more land.
What's up with deserts? Get less sand.
I'm sure people have facepalm pics at the ready.
taking the game in and out when its wet is supposed to clean the system is it not? and about not letting it dry i let it sit for like 5 minutes? or are you giving me shit over something else.
What's up with islands? Get more land.
What's up with deserts? Get less sand.
I have a Christmas wish, can anything posted by Urzu be automaticaly barred from public viewing?
<---Pray's
Noooooo!!
You're only supposed to use a liquid to clean the cartridge contacts, never for system contacts. Even with actual cleaning kits made by any company it says this on the packaging, for any system it's always the same thing. Since you don't have a cleaning kit use a clean dry cart, and try to clean it again.
After cleaning a cart, always make sure it's completely dry before putting it in a system. Try to dry it with a dry Qtip, don't just let it air dry while it's soaking wet. After you dry it with a Qtip, then wait a bit to make sure it's fully dry.
There's nothing wrong with putting rubbing alcohol on the system contacts. Just let it dry before you turn it on. 5 minutes is probably enough for alcohol.
I washed the entire motherboard in water at one point. You won't damage anything as long as it's not powered. (if you try this, let it dry for at least a couple days or so).
I'd still say dirty contacts are the primary suspect. I'm not sure the best way to clean it. I've heard of people using a credit card with some cloth wrapped around it, but I've never tried that. I have used a toothbrush to scrub alcohol on the connector, but that obviously doesn't get into it very deep. The official cleaning cartridge will work but they cost money and get dirtied up quickly.
My model-1 has had these type of lockup problems for most of it's life. In my case I think I've narrowed it down to one of the little components next to the controller inputs. The slightest touch against that component will make it lock. I haven't tried replacing it yet.
Check for bad solder joints. I had an extremely bad solder joint under one of the video RAM chips on my machine. It didn't help my problem but it's definitely something to fix if you see it.
I tried the Game Genie just to see if that would happen and it did (it not freezing). How can I possibly clean my console without damaging it, without a cleaning kit.
What's up with islands? Get more land.
What's up with deserts? Get less sand.
Is it possible that the Game Genie has a more snug fit than a Genesis game? Perhaps you need to gently bend the connector pins in the console to get a tighter fit.
As far as cleaning goes, take a clean dry game and repeatedly insert and remove it. If it gets dirty, clean the game, dry and repeat.
⃟Mario says "... if you do drugs, you go to hell before you die."
WOW...............thread that should of been done within 4 posts max.
Ah well, CLEAN YOUR CARTRIDGE PORT!!!! MOVE ON.............
Here I Googled and found this, it's for ATARI 2600 but should apply to any cartridge based system:
You can try cleaning the contacts on your atari itself. Take a piece of 100 grain or finer sandpaper and cut off a square using scissors to fit the slot in the atari in the middle of the atari cartridge slot between the two prongs. Rub the edges and front of the sandpaper with your fingers to remove any loose grains of sand. Gently insert the sandpaper into the slot. Do not rub side to side, just in and out 4 or 5 times, then flip it over and do the contacts on the other side.
Maybe that will work, maybe you'll have to try something else, whatever just DO IT and stop posting in between about every little thing GEEZ.......
My DP Refs MaximumRD Classic Gaming and Computing Me in a Nutshell (NOT LITERALLY!) http://about.me/maximumrd
WHERE DID THEIR HAIR GO?
100 grit is pretty coarse, 320/400 is more like it but I wouldn't even use sandpaper unless there was corrosion.
Teehee, someone doesn't know how sandpaper works. 100 grit would take all the traces right off of the board. Honestly I've never even come close to using sand paper on a game or system, as vigorous rubbing-alcohol-ing and q-tipp-ing does the trick most of the time; the worst problems have been solved by a toothbrush or paper towel.
Toothbrushes can sometimes be used to clean out the connectors, though usually you have to take the system apart to get to the connector to use it. In the past I have used a toothbrush dipped in rubbing alcohol, which I use to vigorously scrub the pins. After that, I simply blow out the left over alcohol with compressed air, and let it dry for awhile. It hasn't failed me yet, and has brought a couple of NES's back from the blinkies.
On the one time that a toothbrush didn't do a good enough job (I think that it might have been on one of my Genesii), I used a paper towel and plastic keycard. I had a hotel keycard, which is thinner than the circuit board that most games are printed on. I folded a paper towel over it, wet it with alcohol, and inserted and removed it a few times. After that I did the same thing, although with dry paper towels, and repeated until the dry towels stayed clean. Make sure that the card and towel when put together are still thinner than a cart pcb though, or the towel will tear quickly, or you might even bend some pins.
If that doesn't do the trick than you probably have to bend pins into place, which I have never done before, so I'm not going to write about how to do it.
Finally, if you eventually decide that the corrosion on the pins is bad enough that they need to be sanded, try to find some very fine sandpaper, like 400 grit and up. Any lower than that and you're just cutting grooves into the pins, not removing corrosion.