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View Full Version : Do you clean every used game cartridge that you acquire?



stargate
03-18-2003, 07:27 PM
I was just wondering what the general consensus is among the collectors on this forum. When you all buy used game cartridges (ATARI, INTV, NES, SNES, TG16, GENESIS, ETC) do you take the time to clean the contacts with alcohol on every game before using it? I guess I should, but it takes so damn long, especially if I pick up a bunch of games at once. Am I just too lazy or is it not that big of a deal?

kainemaxwell
03-18-2003, 07:32 PM
I've started doing that just to be safe after all the NES problems I had.

IntvGene
03-18-2003, 07:37 PM
I don't care about the contacts or the insides, but I care about the outsides of things, like the plastic and the exterior.

Eww... :puke:

I thoroughly clean all joysticks, systems and carts that I get... in some ways it feels like buying used porn. I don't want to know what the last guy did with it. All I know is.... get out the heavy-duty, anti-bacterial, semi-corrosive cleaner.

Neb
03-18-2003, 07:39 PM
Yeah, I clean every used game I get before I play them. It's a long and painful process, especially if I get a bunch at a time, but I think it is worth it in the end. Sometimes you spend just as much time trying to get a dirty game to work in your system by blowing in it as it would take to just clean it. ;)

IGotTheDot
03-18-2003, 07:55 PM
Yes. I watch TV while I clean the contacts and then the outside. I would never trade a dirty cart. Clean carts = clean systems.

stargate
03-18-2003, 07:58 PM
ok, I'm cleaning right now. I have about 50 to go!!

Neb
03-18-2003, 08:02 PM
Good luck! :-D

klimatron8
03-18-2003, 08:04 PM
Ditto what "igotthedot" said. Here's one --what are you all using to clean your games? The old cloth nes/snes cleaners seem to be disappearing. I got tons of fluid, but hardly any cloths left.

Gunstarhero
03-18-2003, 08:12 PM
Hell yes I always clean those contacts. I'm always satisfied that I took the time to do it too especially after you clean a game and that one cart turns both ends of the q-tip completely black. Nasty. Cleaning games prior to play is a good investment of your time.

Neb
03-18-2003, 08:13 PM
I just use Q-Tips (with the cardboard sticks, not the plastic-they bend too much) and water...
If you use the cleaning fluids or alcohol, does the dirt on the contacts come off faster? :hmm:

Gunstarhero
03-18-2003, 08:14 PM
Ditto what "igotthedot" said. Here's one --what are you all using to clean your games? The old cloth nes/snes cleaners seem to be disappearing. I got tons of fluid, but hardly any cloths left.

I just use what I thought everyone else uses, Q-Tips and rubbing alcohol. Works fine for me. I always wondered why NES and other carts always had warning labels warning against using alcohol as a cleaner. Why is that? Liability reasons perhaps?

Bratwurst
03-18-2003, 08:17 PM
An electronics acid brush, with alcohol. Busts up dirt and doesn't leave strands like cotton swabs will.

EDIT: Oh, I should also mention that I open my cartridges to get to the contacts unobscured.

klimatron8
03-18-2003, 08:19 PM
:hail: Q-TIPS!!! Eexxeelleent!

Chunky
03-18-2003, 08:23 PM
Q-Tips and rubbing alcohol, alwaysw good. most of the dirt and crap is from fingers and stuff, oil, the alcohol cuts it pretty good. Contact trace and eletronics cleaner is the best, but it's expensive. It will take all the dirt up into a foam, and after it dries it leaves a layer of dust you can blow off easily.


i always wanted to know, whats with you guys i trade with. Don't you people clean anything. sheesh. Carts I get in are dirty as hell.

stargate
03-18-2003, 08:24 PM
yeah, I use Q-tips and alcohol. I guess 91% is better than 70%, at least that's what I've heard..........no idea why..........

IGotTheDot
03-18-2003, 08:26 PM
Qtips or Wtips (whatever are on sale at the swapmeet that day) and denatured alcohol. On the outside I just paper towels and goofoff or liftoff or denatured alcohol and then Novus to shine em up good.

Denatured alcohol is important because it leaves no residue like other alcohols.

maxlords
03-18-2003, 08:27 PM
I clean about 60% of my games. When I do, rubbing alcohol and Q-tips on the contacts. When I trade games, I try to remember to clean the contacts, but sometimes I forget. I've also been known to use WD40 afterward on the contacts...coats and protects them for a while...works quite well.

josekortez
03-18-2003, 08:29 PM
I wipe off everything but the sticker.

Dobie
03-18-2003, 08:47 PM
I clean my carts completely--contacts, casing, and I remove all rental stickers. I get off as much of the permanent marker off as I can too. There's just some level of fun I get out of taking what looks to be a totally trashed cart, and making it shine again!!

Dahne
03-18-2003, 08:53 PM
Where do you guys get all these games at once? All the places I've found are pretty dang expensive.

Arqueologia_Digital
03-18-2003, 08:59 PM
I clean only the plastic and the exterior usually...and also the boxes & manuals... LOL

Quintracker
03-18-2003, 09:13 PM
I clean the contacts on games before I play them and before I sell/trade. I'm usually too lazy to clean newly aquired ones as soon as I get home. :P For cleaning I use rubbing alcohol and these nice strong shop towels I found in the garage. They clean nicely and don't leave anything behind on the contacts.

As for where I get most of my games, they come from auctions, flea markets, and yard sales. I haven't bought a new game though for years. LOL

ClubNinja
03-18-2003, 09:21 PM
If the game hasn't come straight out of the shrinkwrap, it gets a very thorough cleaning here. Contacts, casing, and even the label. Every sign of sticker, marker, and other goo must be removed. Like mentioned above, it's great to take a gross looking cart and make it look new.

For sticker and marker, I very carefully apply the Goo Gone - I love that stuff. Then, an overall cleaning with Fantastic. Contacts get alcohol or sometimes Fantastic too, since I've found it works pretty well there. It's Fantastic!

This task is very time consuming - especially after a trade meet! In fact, the Sunday morning after a Saturday NECG meet, I usually spend about two hours cleaning up all the new goods. It's pretty rewarding though. Toss in a movie or a CD, and bond with the games before even playing them. It's a collection team-building exercise, really.

icbrkr
03-18-2003, 09:21 PM
I was just wondering what the general consensus is among the collectors on this forum. When you all buy used game cartridges (ATARI, INTV, NES, SNES, TG16, GENESIS, ETC) do you take the time to clean the contacts with alcohol on every game before using it? I guess I should, but it takes so damn long, especially if I pick up a bunch of games at once. Am I just too lazy or is it not that big of a deal?

Absolutely.. you should see the nasty stuff that comes off a used cartridge. Who knows where it's been :)

Brian

omnedon
03-18-2003, 09:34 PM
Yes, because it's way easier, and safer than trying to clean cartridge slots. I want my systems to work for many more years, and clean carts are a big part of that.

stargate
03-18-2003, 10:08 PM
Yes, because it's way easier, and safer than trying to clean cartridge slots. I want my systems to work for many more years, and clean carts are a big part of that.

well, that brings up a good question. How do you clean the cartridge slot of a system?

Mr Mort
03-18-2003, 10:25 PM
I clean the contacts and exterior of every used cartridge game I buy.
Isopropyl alcohol and Q-tips work great for cleaning the contacts...
Goo-Gone is great for the exterior to get rid of any sticker residue and dirt in general. Great stuff to clean the exterior of your cartridges, as it will get ANYTHING off without damaging or discoloring the cartridge at all.

Bratwurst
03-18-2003, 10:29 PM
well, that brings up a good question. How do you clean the cartridge slot of a system?

Toothbrush + alchohol, removing the cover of the console itself so I have unrestricted access to the cartridge port. Sometimes I'll use a pair of very fine, elongated tweezers to pick out stubborn stuff. Debris tends to collect at the bottom of ports, oddly enough.

orrimarrko
03-18-2003, 10:33 PM
I clean the outside of every case, box, whatever. Goo gone or just soap and water usually takes care of everything.

For games, I won't buy a dirty disc, but I will clean simple problems. I clean every cart inside and out, no matter what. Rubbing alcohol is the solvent of choice.

Only exception are carts that can't be opened without removing the sticker (ie. 2600 carts, etc.) For those, outside will have to do.

SInce most of this is for display only, I keep all of my stuff in immaculate, well-organized condition.

That's the curse of being an anal retentive... O_O

stargate
03-18-2003, 10:57 PM
Qtips or Wtips (whatever are on sale at the swapmeet that day) and denatured alcohol. On the outside I just paper towels and goofoff or liftoff or denatured alcohol and then Novus to shine em up good.

Denatured alcohol is important because it leaves no residue like other alcohols.

why, what is the deal with denatured vs. isopropyl alcohol?

zektor
03-18-2003, 11:45 PM
I usually buy carts in large lots, and don't get the time to test or clean every single one right away. But as I get around to playing them, I clean them with some alcohol and q-tips before they enter my system(s). In all the many years of collecting carts, I only had one cart game that refused to work after a cleaning, and that was Golden Axe for the Genesis. Something was actually wrong with the cart. But other than that, I have had a ton of carts that wouldn't work right off the bat, until the alcohol was use...which in turn made them work flawlessly. Oh how I LOVE carts...

bargora
03-19-2003, 10:05 AM
Yeah, what gives with the alleged isopropyl alcohol "residue"? I have never observed such a thing. I mean, it's a slightly larger molecule than the ethyl and methyl alcohols, but it should vaporize completely, I would think.

Not only that, but look at the other junk in denatured alcohol (from a MSDS at http://www.syndel.com/msds/denatured_ethanol_msds.html )

Ethyl alcohol 82.9%
Ethyl acetate 0.2%
Methyl alcohol 16.4%
Methyl ethyl ketone 0.5%

I don't know if all denatured alcohols would have the bonus ethyl acetate and methyl ethyl ketone, but I'd be more worried (but still not much) about them leaving a residue.

Mayhem
03-19-2003, 10:19 AM
Depends... if the contacts look dirty, or the cartridge seems to have been kept in a dusty environment, I'll get the cotton buds (Q-tips to you lot) out and give the whole plug in area the once over. Otherwise generally not. Unless I plug it in and it doesn't boot :roll:

Eternal Champion
03-19-2003, 11:59 AM
DEFINITELY clean the cartridge contacts!! I think it's a mistake not to. Then your pin-connector in your system gets dirty!! Common sense to me. And clean them regularly.
And if you sell and/or trade: PLEASE clean the contacts and PLEASE clean the exterior!!! If I get a dirty game from Ebay, that tells me something about the seller... >:( >.<
For cleaning the contacts, use Doc's Cleaning kit--they have non-lint foam swabs. Q-Tips leave behind a lot of lint. To clean the exterior, I like anti-static wipes for computers and electronic equipment. I wipe off all of my stuff with them. To clean my used controllers (holy YUCK), I opened them up, and here I used Q-Tips and alcohol and the wipes. After years of use my SNES controllers were nasty. But the pads are still in good shape! Nintendo's controllers really are awesome.

Alex Kidd
03-19-2003, 12:11 PM
I got two carts that won't work no matter HOW much you clean em.

Golden Axe II
Art of Fighting

Art of Fighting is no big loss, I got it second hand free, the box was in tatters and no manual.

Golden Axe II? that's a mystery. I got it brand new, had it for a few years and it saw LOTS of play. Then one day I stuck it in the Genesis, and nothing. Just black.
To this day I STILL try it occasionally just to see if it'll work; about 75% of the time I get black, the other 25% I get the "license for use by sega" bios screen and then just black.
I loved that game. But at least I can play it on emulation, and playing THAT game on emulation is 100% legal for me! heheheheh

I still have the box and manual in great shape... so if anyone wants to 'donate' me a cartridge they can!!! :P

Alex Kidd

Alex Kidd
03-19-2003, 12:13 PM
By the way, I never noticed how uppity you all are about cleaning carts and stuff...
What about the OTHER ports? controller ports, RF, A/V, adapter and the like? and you guys that rigorous with those too?

Alex Kidd

Eternal Champion
03-19-2003, 01:15 PM
Hey Al Kidd, I don't mean to uppity. The issue for me is simply taking care of stuff. As a buyer of 16-bit and 8-bit games, these games are old. They have not been manufactured in years. You can't just go to Shit-Mart and get a new one. It's very frustrating for me that so few people took just a little bit of effort to take care of the games. So finding one that is in good shape and clean is not easy. Hell, when I first had my NES, I didn't do anything! Compared to most people's games, mine were pristine... Anyway, I've occasionally bought a cartridge from large sellers, and have been shocked that they would sell me something so filthy. Would you sell someone your car with trash and dirt and sticky shit all over the interior? Furthermore, would you buy one like that? It seems like simple good business to me.
Have you tried cleaning the contacts on your Golden Axe II cart? Might work, might not...I had Gauntlet for NES (the grey cart, I curse myself now), and one day it just stopped working...cleaned it as well. But I think one day I threw against the wall, I'm sure that did it...damn that game pissed me off...

Bratwurst
03-19-2003, 01:40 PM
You know, I'd try opening up the cart itself and check to see if any dirt is on the circuit board or between the pins of the chips soldered onto it.

hamburgler
03-19-2003, 06:17 PM
I always clean used games no matter what even if it is clean,i can't take risks getting more dirt and dust into my systems.

bargora
03-19-2003, 07:29 PM
As far as cleaning the ports themselves, Gamestop was having a fire sale on cart and system cleaners last fall, so I picked up several: SNES, Genesis, Gameboy, and Multi. The SNES, Genesis, and Gameboy ones are shaped like carts and just slide into the slot. All of them have a strip covered in some sort of rubberized material. When you pull it out of the slot, you can see some corrosion-type crud on the rubber. The multi-system cleaner just has several rubberized strips of various widths on handles so that you can stick them into the cart slots of other systems.

Did anybody else buy these things? I think they were originally $10 apiece, but I picked them up because they had been marked down to $3 each.

kainemaxwell
03-19-2003, 07:39 PM
Bargora, if they're the ones by Player's Edge then I have the one for the NES.

Cleaning all my carts I discovered the connectors for my copy of Lifeforce are really rusty looking.

NESCollector75
03-19-2003, 07:59 PM
I know it sounds like a lot of work but I always clean all of my carts. Now I open them all up and clean all the contacts with a white eraser. Before I used Armour all auto glass cleaner. That stuff works amazing as well as working on the outside of carts and the lables.

ManekiNeko
03-20-2003, 06:42 PM
Generally, no. Not unless they won't work until I do.

JR

POST 46!

Mr-E_MaN
03-20-2003, 07:33 PM
I clean every game I get before testing it. I have always done it this way, it just made sence because some of the games I get have gunk on the cart.

den68
03-21-2003, 10:00 AM
I clean everything I find. carts, consoles, CD's, the boxes, whatever. Like a few other have posted I really enjoy making a grubby nasty old system look all shiny and new.

I'm especially particular about cleaning my NES carts. for some reason those always seem to be the dirtiest. I still have my original NES purchased in 1986 and until I started collecting a few years ago it had never had a used cart in it. it works great and I want to keep it that way so it only get carts with gleaming contacts inserted into it.

I remove all stickers, markers and whatever crud may be on the stuff. I've got a table (my cleaning station) in my game room fully stocked with all the essentials, q-tips, paper towls, alcohol, bestine, goo gone, Windex, 409, etc.

it's a pain in the ass sometimes, I feel like I spend more time cleaning stuff than playing it but in the end it's worth it.

Eternal Champion
03-21-2003, 01:14 PM
I agree with Blondie Lover. My Genny is from 1990 and SNES 1994...a big mistake I always made is renting games. I think of it like this: when you have unprotected sex with several people who all have had unprotected sex with several people. That's how VDs spread, people.
Like with used and rented games that have never been cleaned. (er, in a way) My cartridge slots are dirty no matter how clean my games are now. It's hard to get in there, first of all, and hard to get the dirt out!
I'm just glad I got a NES with a new 72-pin connector. Those old NES cleaners are hard to come by, it seems.

Or like ground beef: one hamburger is made up of hundreds of cows, blood and intestinal contimation high... O_O