Good video, but as a massive WHAM! Fan as a teenager, I've gotta say that was sacrilege listening to that version of wake me up, however I'm willing to forgive and forget as the video content was good lol 😄😁😆😅🤣😂❤
Steve you need to replace that 0ohm resistor with a proper 0.01ohm 1% pronto, it might be part of the battery charging circuit and very bad things 🔥could happen if the battery is overcharged.
I looked at the RK817 data sheet and your suspicion is correct: That is the battery gauge sense resistor - It needs to be the correct value or you will overcharge the battery.
I'm thinking it probably acts as a shunt for sensing the battery current, either for charging or discharging. It probably won't cause an overcharge, but it might result in too much charging current, which isn't exactly good either. It might also cause issues for the accuracy of the battery percentage reading, since the current draw is usually used to compensate for the voltage drop.
Good fix! A note though, the 10mOhm resistor could have been a current sense resistor for overcurrent detection. That's how shunt current sensors work, you feed the difference voltage from either terminal of the resistor to a differential op amp and it gives you measurable voltage from a few millivolts or less. a 0-ohm will yield 0 voltage drop, so your current sensor will always measure 0 amps. It's just a protection though, so it can work without. Cheers
@@BennyAlex98 Usually (but not always) part of a filter circuit (usually with capacitors to form an LC circuit) to suppress power supply switching noise from affecting sensitive components (micros etc). Measures like an inductor (low resistance).
I don't think they just fell off... Seems more likely that the circuit got overloaded somehow and burned up the 0 ohm resistor and torched that 100uF capacitor too.
Steve, when measuring small resistance (let's say less than 10 Ohms) with a handheld multimeter, you should always "zero your leads", i.e. check the reading on the multimeter with the leads shorted and, if it's not zero, substract it from the measured value. A good set of leads should read about 0.06 Ohms, which your multimeter should round up to 0.1 Ohms. If it doesn't, then the "0" Ohm resistor does indeed have some resistance. At my job I regularly measure resistances of 0.0001 Ohms or lower, so 0.01 Ohm is a fairly large one in the world of current measuring shunts.
@Sam Holdsworth It's a reflection of the repair worker in both work ethic and care about the item they're working on. Stez amplifies this by how he won't give up on most things until there's absolutely nothing else to try. If you sent in something to be repaired, you'd want it back as close to the factory, wouldn't you?
@@samholdsworth420 Dirt can promote corrosion, and of course it's harder to inspect your work for bridges and cold solder joints if you don't clean it properly. It seems to me that a lot of youngish men interpret cleanliness as fussiness and therefore weak. It's almost as if they're threatened by something looking good, as if that coded unmanly for some reason.
My Poppa was an electrical engineer and I have fond memories of watching him fixing the neighbourhood's broken electrical goods. Your channel has a similar vibe to those days I lost, thank you! (P.s I don't think you're an old man!)
I still remember my first zero ohm resistor fondly, I was so excited! My first room temperature superconductor! I had all kinds of stuff planned so you can probably tell how sad I was when I ran some amperage through and measured a voltage drop. :(.
Nice fix Steve! A 0,01 Ohm resistor (or any really low precize value resistor) is usually a current sensing resistor. The device is measuring the voltage drop on that specific value and then it can calculate the current draw. I do now know the entire circuit could be that it is measuring the current draw of teh device or charging current or something like this and if there would be a short for example it would know that there is an excess overcurrent so it would shut down. You might have killed this feature now because it will definitely measure some odd value.
These are often part of the smart battery management chipset in gaming devices with a battery. Sometimes it’s on its own micro board on the end of the battery, but often it’s either on its own separate board off the battery or on the main board itself.
If it's for measuring charge current, it could possibly damage the battery. Regardless, please replace it with a precise 0.01 Ohm resistor ASAP, Steve! 🙏😬😁
Nice fix..... makes you wonder what exploded those components... likely the wrong power supply..... you are lucky the voltage regulator was not fried as well... GOOD STUFF Mate !!
What, you mean ceramic caps aren’t supposed to explode? I’ve been electronicing wrong all these years! Next you’ll tell me they don’t actually hide all the colors in every LED, your just not over currenting it enough.
@@hugegamer5988 Heh, if it worries you ceramic caps exploding, you should take a look at tantalum ones. They tend to explode like a little bombs... 😁 Cheers!
do you ever get stressed out with repairs ? I often feel flustered and overwhelmed at times doing repairs , most of the time is like repeat putting back together to tear down again to go over something again, or the likes, I dont know what the right words are but i like that you seem really calm and clear headed when doing these videos, couldnt be me, so props to you !
What on earth happened to that poor Odroid for it to have shat out its components?! Nice fix & video as always. Can we get a UA-cam Repairmen Song, get together with some other tech repair peeps on UA-cam and all have a singsong together? That'd be fantastic
No idea what happened to it, I'm guessing dropped, or someone took some pliers to the battery connector and starting pulling away for fun! Great idea on the song, I'll ask around, maybe a Christmas rap?! I'm sure everyone will hate that! 😁😬
Steve, I’ve become a big fan of your channel! I’d really like it if you would talk about how you have learned all you know about electronics and your equipment. Cheers! 👍
That was also my first guess, especially being located right next to the battery terminal. Looking at the datasheet confirmes it: the resistor is connected to the SNSP and SNSN pins of the RK817 chip, which are responsible for "Bat charging and discharging sense current".
@@StezStixFix Hi Steve, just to let you know, there are people here that has confirmed that the 0.01ohm resistor is for measuring charge current. It's critical that this is not a zero ohm resistor, because the chip that manages charge, will think that it's charging with 0Amps, because there's no voltage drop over the resistor, and keep cranking up the voltage to whatever maximum it can, which will likely destroy the battery - but I hope that it won't fail violently. Regardless, please replace that resistor before charging the battery again 🙏😊 (EDIT: I'm not saying this to steal credit, please give it to the person who looked up the diagram - I just worry about battery safety)
That resistor is the current sense resistor. Not always needed for the console to work, but if you have charging issues later, at least you will know where is the fault.
Another great video as usual!! Thank you for sharing! Cant wait till the next one. Almost got all the past videos watched. Then what will I do while I wait for new ones? AHHHHHHHHH
The small value resistor was a shunt resistor designed to measure battery current. It might not be a good idea to charge that unit until you get a correct value resistor.
My theory is that the guy who assembled this finished putting it together, then went for a bathroom break. On the way he overheard that everyone was going to get fired, so he went back and performed component surgery out of spite. That day they also fired the QA guy who would have been responsible for this, so all the items on his plate got pushed through.
A mate of mine had a funny one come into his shop last week, chap brought in a motherboard missing some components and he was quite distressed as no matter what he did, the components he had changed kept falling off... so me friend said what solder are you using and the chap an older bloke said "Oh I used some of that low melt solder everyone raves on about"... mystery solved
I've seen surface mount 0-ohm resistors used a couple of ways, principally as a jumper instead of using a via to another layer to hop over another track on the PCB, I've also seen them used as a "poor man's fuse" since the component may be electronically inconsequential it still has a maximum power rating, which can be more practical than using an actual fuse ~ particularly around batteries where a fixed amperage fuse can be problematic
Mate you are a great content maker, eewww I can believe I said content maker... Mate you make great videos, always make me smile, keep up the good work 😊
I miss Guy Fawkes night since moving abroad. I used to celebrate it for my kids until we were told fireworks outside of new years is illegal :( Oh...Great fix Steve. Sound like Steve Wright patting himself on the back there..."Great show Steve".
That was Battery Current Sense. The charge chip diverts a portion of the USB charge voltage to the battery for charging. The charge chip outputs the voltage towards the battery. To ensure the current is normal, the charge chip samples the voltage before and after it passes the resistor. Without the resistor the charge chip thinks there is a short and will not charge or supply power to the battery.
@@twotone3070 ??? If you say so. Not that I know what a sense resistor or a CC diag is. I only just found out how to change the batteries in my remote. I am glad that people with brains exist. If only I had half your knowledge I would be happy.
@@yogibear2k220 Don't get me wrong, I think Steve is great, I wish he was a mate of mine. He has ten times more screen presence than I do and I wish him every success. I know what it's like to put yourself out there to take criticism and it only takes one smart arse to spoil your day. On the point of the resistor I just thought, Oh, he hasn't looked into why it showed a resistance and why would it be zero ohms and this surprised me. No hate or one-up-manship intended, I accept my comment did read that way.
I'd love to know what happened to it, seems odd it would self destruct like that unless it was damaged already and popped out when the unit was dropped!?
@@StezStixFix I’ve designed electronic devices that are designed to be thrown and impact hard surfaces that regularly take upwards of 1k times earths gravity, small smd components like 1206 and under don’t even need potting and won’t come off unless there is a *ton* of board flex and likely many throws. When they fail from impact due to board bending, they crack a colder solder joint or crack an end often in a way that’s hard to see. Leaving both the pads and a bit of the substrate tells me it was outgassing causing an explosion likely from over voltage as another commenter suggested.
@@StezStixFix I do this for a living. I can almost guarantee someone has twatted it off the board when handling it, same with the current sense resistor. Likely either dropped the PCB and those components caught the brunt of it, or they've had an "oops!" moment with a screwdriver. You'll want to fit the correct value 0r01 too btw, it's how it'll measure the charge current, with that 0r link on there it'll think it's drawing a different amount of current than it actually is, unless you've got super lucky and picked one that is actually 0r01.
Amazing work as always. Where did you get the little voltage reader gadget plugged into your powerbank ftom. That’s a wicked bit of kit. I’d also love to send you my megadrive 2 for an av port repair but no idea how
I have a little HH console. It looks like a Game boy that's been shrunk in wash. It plays a lot of games from Regular GB, CB Colour, GB Advance, NES, Master System, MegaDrive, Snes, N64, Game Cube, PS1, and MAME. The only trouble is the screen is tiny and a bit shit. And some games require more buttons then the system has. But it was only £25 and it came with a 64G SD card filled with over 4000 roms.
R4 is a pulldown resistor. R3 and R62 seem pull-up resistors for servicing the board perhaps? R12 is a short between BAT- and ground. I wonder if anyone connected Bat+ there and R12 blew up.
I own an original of the Beavis & Butthead game for my SNES. It’s proper annoying to play. If I’m wanting something to annoy me to take my mind off something else annoying, I’ll play it. I mainly keep it as a novelty.
C54 where are you? If anyone gets that reference, you will earn a hero cookie. Also R12 appears to be just a current sense resistor. Only reason they ask for a high precision resistor is for accurate stable results.
But as someone else pointed out, this is for charge current - with a 0 Ohm resistor, it'll charge with as much voltage as can be delivered, which likely will damage the battery
Hi sir. Can you please tell me any hope for my switch that I didn't charge or use one year and this time. Didn't won't to charge left it in charge for two days still nothing I tried hold for 20 second and nothing. It did this before and works but this time seem nothing:(
Stupid... Stupid game
😝😝I'm watching just for this moment
Nice repair 🎉😊
Would you like a Gameboy Pocket present?
Good video, but as a massive WHAM! Fan as a teenager, I've gotta say that was sacrilege listening to that version of wake me up, however I'm willing to forgive and forget as the video content was good lol 😄😁😆😅🤣😂❤
You should learn how to make ur own resistors at home.
Or how to tweak the ones you already have.
I think that really really low value resistor was acting as a shunt so it could measure the power draw. That's why the power went through it.
Steve you need to replace that 0ohm resistor with a proper 0.01ohm 1% pronto, it might be part of the battery charging circuit and very bad things 🔥could happen if the battery is overcharged.
I agree with this. Do not leave it charging for a long time until you fit the correct part.
I looked at the RK817 data sheet and your suspicion is correct: That is the battery gauge sense resistor - It needs to be the correct value or you will overcharge the battery.
I'm thinking it probably acts as a shunt for sensing the battery current, either for charging or discharging. It probably won't cause an overcharge, but it might result in too much charging current, which isn't exactly good either. It might also cause issues for the accuracy of the battery percentage reading, since the current draw is usually used to compensate for the voltage drop.
Exactly, you find the exact same type of resistor (but way bigger) on EVERY laptop on DC Side and Bat side, it's main propose is to sense current
I work in an industry where you just replace the board, the components are tiny. I salute you for being able to do it.
Good fix! A note though, the 10mOhm resistor could have been a current sense resistor for overcurrent detection. That's how shunt current sensors work, you feed the difference voltage from either terminal of the resistor to a differential op amp and it gives you measurable voltage from a few millivolts or less. a 0-ohm will yield 0 voltage drop, so your current sensor will always measure 0 amps. It's just a protection though, so it can work without.
Cheers
Great Job Steve! Those pesky resistors and capacitors falling off. On a side note FB1 FB2 or FB normally means ferrite bead, not a fuse :)
what are those for?
@@BennyAlex98 Usually (but not always) part of a filter circuit (usually with capacitors to form an LC circuit) to suppress power supply switching noise from affecting sensitive components (micros etc). Measures like an inductor (low resistance).
Pretty sure fb is Facebook
they don't just fall off, it's the stupid user doing stupid shit to their electronics.
I don't think they just fell off... Seems more likely that the circuit got overloaded somehow and burned up the 0 ohm resistor and torched that 100uF capacitor too.
Steve, when measuring small resistance (let's say less than 10 Ohms) with a handheld multimeter, you should always "zero your leads", i.e. check the reading on the multimeter with the leads shorted and, if it's not zero, substract it from the measured value. A good set of leads should read about 0.06 Ohms, which your multimeter should round up to 0.1 Ohms. If it doesn't, then the "0" Ohm resistor does indeed have some resistance.
At my job I regularly measure resistances of 0.0001 Ohms or lower, so 0.01 Ohm is a fairly large one in the world of current measuring shunts.
Appreciation post for always super cleaning the area of work. I've seen other repairers leave stains on the board, which drives me nuts. Love it!
Who cares if you don't see it lol
@Sam Holdsworth It's a reflection of the repair worker in both work ethic and care about the item they're working on. Stez amplifies this by how he won't give up on most things until there's absolutely nothing else to try.
If you sent in something to be repaired, you'd want it back as close to the factory, wouldn't you?
@@GameRaveTV fair enough.
@@samholdsworth420 Dirt can promote corrosion, and of course it's harder to inspect your work for bridges and cold solder joints if you don't clean it properly.
It seems to me that a lot of youngish men interpret cleanliness as fussiness and therefore weak. It's almost as if they're threatened by something looking good, as if that coded unmanly for some reason.
@@Ea-Nasir_Copper_Co no I just wouldn't care... And I'm 42 years old I'm not very young lol
My Poppa was an electrical engineer and I have fond memories of watching him fixing the neighbourhood's broken electrical goods. Your channel has a similar vibe to those days I lost, thank you! (P.s I don't think you're an old man!)
I still remember my first zero ohm resistor fondly, I was so excited! My first room temperature superconductor! I had all kinds of stuff planned so you can probably tell how sad I was when I ran some amperage through and measured a voltage drop. :(.
The troubleshooting part never gets old. Keep it up!
Nice fix Steve! A 0,01 Ohm resistor (or any really low precize value resistor) is usually a current sensing resistor. The device is measuring the voltage drop on that specific value and then it can calculate the current draw. I do now know the entire circuit could be that it is measuring the current draw of teh device or charging current or something like this and if there would be a short for example it would know that there is an excess overcurrent so it would shut down. You might have killed this feature now because it will definitely measure some odd value.
These are often part of the smart battery management chipset in gaming devices with a battery. Sometimes it’s on its own micro board on the end of the battery, but often it’s either on its own separate board off the battery or on the main board itself.
@@hugegamer5988 yes, in most modern devices, battery management is solved by specific ICs and the implemented BMS on the battery.
If it's for measuring charge current, it could possibly damage the battery.
Regardless, please replace it with a precise 0.01 Ohm resistor ASAP, Steve! 🙏😬😁
12:41 is the reason I watch this channel. This flip would literally happen to all of us repairing stuff. Keep it real dude!
I have watched everyone of your videos, even though I understand zero of what you’re doing. Def one of my favorite channels.
I love the fact that you fix things that other people can't.. but your phone (tablet?) screen has a crack in it just like everybody else's.
Nice fix..... makes you wonder what exploded those components... likely the wrong power supply..... you are lucky the voltage regulator was not fried as well... GOOD STUFF Mate !!
Cheers Ron, Yeah, good point, I wonder if the voltage regulator is gonna last? 🤔
What, you mean ceramic caps aren’t supposed to explode? I’ve been electronicing wrong all these years! Next you’ll tell me they don’t actually hide all the colors in every LED, your just not over currenting it enough.
@@hugegamer5988 HAHAHAHA
it was made in a Chinese factory so they were probably not put on correctly. It seems they are still on the factory floor somewhere.
@@hugegamer5988 Heh, if it worries you ceramic caps exploding, you should take a look at tantalum ones. They tend to explode like a little bombs... 😁
Cheers!
Love this channel for just how real you are.
Well done bringing this one back to life!
i got one of these in the sale for £50
pretty fun to build and fun to play on
You are amazing at being able to fix things.
do you ever get stressed out with repairs ? I often feel flustered and overwhelmed at times doing repairs , most of the time is like repeat putting back together to tear down again to go over something again, or the likes, I dont know what the right words are but i like that you seem really calm and clear headed when doing these videos, couldnt be me, so props to you !
1,100 subscribers more than last week. Well done!
The fireworks graphics were a beautiful touch 🎆👌
Made me LOL
0:58 the music is GoldenEye 64 Facility ❤
Good to see you fix your Odroid Go there Steve another nice fix mate 👍
Brilliant fix well spotted
Nice , always looking forward to a new episode.
"I think there's something going on."
Stez, 2022
🤣🤣
Your getting better and better and finding these faults.
Cool looking machine though
Great work it lives again.
The gold cylinder marked X1 is a crystal. The numbers are likely the frequency, just over 12mhz it looks like
Good job on the fix, I can't believe how many pieces of tech have ended up in the garbage but just needed new capcitors. :D
What on earth happened to that poor Odroid for it to have shat out its components?! Nice fix & video as always.
Can we get a UA-cam Repairmen Song, get together with some other tech repair peeps on UA-cam and all have a singsong together? That'd be fantastic
No idea what happened to it, I'm guessing dropped, or someone took some pliers to the battery connector and starting pulling away for fun! Great idea on the song, I'll ask around, maybe a Christmas rap?! I'm sure everyone will hate that! 😁😬
@@StezStixFix Hmmmm, wouldn't that be C-rap? Great idea, look forward to hearing it!
Steve, I’ve become a big fan of your channel! I’d really like it if you would talk about how you have learned all you know about electronics and your equipment. Cheers! 👍
Beauty!! Stupid exploding components.... 👍
🤣 I hope they did explode, no idea how that happens otherwise, unless it took a nasty fall and they fell out!
0.01 ohm resistor is most likely for sensing the charge current.
That was also my first guess, especially being located right next to the battery terminal. Looking at the datasheet confirmes it: the resistor is connected to the SNSP and SNSN pins of the RK817 chip, which are responsible for "Bat charging and discharging sense current".
I feared that, and it makes it pretty damned important to replace it
Nice flow, even got a rhyme today!
😁 I hope I'm pronouncing your name correctly, but it does rhyme nicely with "throw your hands in the air!" the way I say it! 🤣
@@StezStixFix Your pronunciation is more than perfect! Even french people has trouble with my last name...
Love watching you repair then despair, Steve lol. Enjoyable viewing as ever 👍👍
Glad you found your soldering shoes again! 😊
I have one of these, you got an original, the revised ones had usb c. They're cool, came in a kitset and you assembled it yourself :)
Great fix Steve. Those guys might have kept their fireworks for the end.
my fsavourite part was when you ficed that LCD connector so easily that was clearly already broken
amazing video as always!! thanks Steve!!
Fantastic work Steve!
Uncle Steve is doing GoDs work
Love the fireworks!! Great episode as always.
Nice one Steve - back of the net😀
Thanks Greg! 👍
@@StezStixFix Hi Steve, just to let you know, there are people here that has confirmed that the 0.01ohm resistor is for measuring charge current. It's critical that this is not a zero ohm resistor, because the chip that manages charge, will think that it's charging with 0Amps, because there's no voltage drop over the resistor, and keep cranking up the voltage to whatever maximum it can, which will likely destroy the battery - but I hope that it won't fail violently.
Regardless, please replace that resistor before charging the battery again 🙏😊
(EDIT: I'm not saying this to steal credit, please give it to the person who looked up the diagram - I just worry about battery safety)
That resistor is the current sense resistor. Not always needed for the console to work, but if you have charging issues later, at least you will know where is the fault.
Searched for use of that milli ohm resistor. Could be an amp-sensor, converting amps to volts for an IC to measure.
Goldeye looked good until it loaded fully
great video
0.1 can be nasty! - Nice fix !!
Well done Steve 😊👍
Another great video as usual!! Thank you for sharing! Cant wait till the next one. Almost got all the past videos watched. Then what will I do while I wait for new ones? AHHHHHHHHH
Amazing work, as always.
Do you also offer repair / modding services?
The small value resistor was a shunt resistor designed to measure battery current. It might not be a good idea to charge that unit until you get a correct value resistor.
Idk crap about this stuff but it’s so entertaining lmao. Keep up the great humor and content.
Bordel la bande son de GoldenEye est juste magnifique. Que de souvenirs ❤
You put the Boom Boom into my heart!
My theory is that the guy who assembled this finished putting it together, then went for a bathroom break. On the way he overheard that everyone was going to get fired, so he went back and performed component surgery out of spite.
That day they also fired the QA guy who would have been responsible for this, so all the items on his plate got pushed through.
A mate of mine had a funny one come into his shop last week, chap brought in a motherboard missing some components and he was quite distressed as no matter what he did, the components he had changed kept falling off... so me friend said what solder are you using and the chap an older bloke said "Oh I used some of that low melt solder everyone raves on about"... mystery solved
I've seen surface mount 0-ohm resistors used a couple of ways, principally as a jumper instead of using a via to another layer to hop over another track on the PCB, I've also seen them used as a "poor man's fuse" since the component may be electronically inconsequential it still has a maximum power rating, which can be more practical than using an actual fuse ~ particularly around batteries where a fixed amperage fuse can be problematic
Mate you are a great content maker, eewww I can believe I said content maker...
Mate you make great videos, always make me smile, keep up the good work 😊
That resistor was for sensing the present of battery current .
I miss Guy Fawkes night since moving abroad. I used to celebrate it for my kids until we were told fireworks outside of new years is illegal :( Oh...Great fix Steve. Sound like Steve Wright patting himself on the back there..."Great show Steve".
That was Battery Current Sense.
The charge chip diverts a portion of the USB charge voltage to the battery for charging.
The charge chip outputs the voltage towards the battery. To ensure the current is normal, the charge chip samples the voltage before and after it passes the resistor.
Without the resistor the charge chip thinks there is a short and will not charge or supply power to the battery.
Can't wait to see the Retroid 5
Well done on the repair, Steve. You are getting more and more like Big Clive every day.
Well, except he didn't spot the purpose of the current sense resistor, which I was surprised about tbh. It was written on the cct diag.
@@twotone3070 ??? If you say so. Not that I know what a sense resistor or a CC diag is. I only just found out how to change the batteries in my remote. I am glad that people with brains exist. If only I had half your knowledge I would be happy.
@@yogibear2k220 Don't get me wrong, I think Steve is great, I wish he was a mate of mine. He has ten times more screen presence than I do and I wish him every success.
I know what it's like to put yourself out there to take criticism and it only takes one smart arse to spoil your day.
On the point of the resistor I just thought, Oh, he hasn't looked into why it showed a resistance and why would it be zero ohms and this surprised me. No hate or one-up-manship intended, I accept my comment did read that way.
Another great upload and another great fix 👍⭐.
in 3:14 on "Rockchip" the fifth and sixth from left side is " ----------- Joined together ------------ "
Oh man, RIP that poor capacitor.
I'd love to know what happened to it, seems odd it would self destruct like that unless it was damaged already and popped out when the unit was dropped!?
@@StezStixFix I’ve designed electronic devices that are designed to be thrown and impact hard surfaces that regularly take upwards of 1k times earths gravity, small smd components like 1206 and under don’t even need potting and won’t come off unless there is a *ton* of board flex and likely many throws. When they fail from impact due to board bending, they crack a colder solder joint or crack an end often in a way that’s hard to see. Leaving both the pads and a bit of the substrate tells me it was outgassing causing an explosion likely from over voltage as another commenter suggested.
@@StezStixFix I do this for a living. I can almost guarantee someone has twatted it off the board when handling it, same with the current sense resistor. Likely either dropped the PCB and those components caught the brunt of it, or they've had an "oops!" moment with a screwdriver. You'll want to fit the correct value 0r01 too btw, it's how it'll measure the charge current, with that 0r link on there it'll think it's drawing a different amount of current than it actually is, unless you've got super lucky and picked one that is actually 0r01.
2:33 Never trust battery voltage with no load. It could drop to 3v faster than you think ;)
I wonder if the R3/R4 and R61/R62 pairs were just being used as configuration jumpers.
How do you plan to celebrate once you've hit 100,000 users? You're so close!
What a 'gotcha' in the end. Weird that it won't even power on without the microSD card.
with that barrel type power plug likely somone applied way too much voltage and the 0ohm and 100uf cap gave up to protect the rest of the board
0.01R used for current sensing , maybe part of charge or battery management circuitry.
Nice It definitely looked like someone removed those components. maybe tried fix it but failed.
Amazing work as always. Where did you get the little voltage reader gadget plugged into your powerbank ftom. That’s a wicked bit of kit. I’d also love to send you my megadrive 2 for an av port repair but no idea how
Gosh you had me at "Let's take it apart..." 😂🖖
I love the raps… maybe it just me, but keep it “flowing” Steve.
I have a little HH console. It looks like a Game boy that's been shrunk in wash.
It plays a lot of games from Regular GB, CB Colour, GB Advance, NES, Master System, MegaDrive, Snes, N64, Game Cube, PS1, and MAME. The only trouble is the screen is tiny and a bit shit. And some games require more buttons then the system has. But it was only £25 and it came with a 64G SD card filled with over 4000 roms.
R4 is a pulldown resistor. R3 and R62 seem pull-up resistors for servicing the board perhaps? R12 is a short between BAT- and ground. I wonder if anyone connected Bat+ there and R12 blew up.
Someone was desperately trying to reach you on a landline the whole time lol
That was a roller-coaster.
I own an original of the Beavis & Butthead game for my SNES.
It’s proper annoying to play. If I’m wanting something to annoy me to take my mind off something else annoying, I’ll play it. I mainly keep it as a novelty.
Hi, where can I get a stand like the one you have for your microscope. The stock stand is kinda short, thanks.
He has a video about the microscopes, I don't have time to link it but I wanted to give you a hint in case Steve doesn't see this.
I have one of these, they were great, could even do some PSP :)
Dude, your blue soldering mat could really do with a bit of a clean lol
You need to drop it again, this fix was to easy :)
Great vid again. 👍😀
C54 where are you? If anyone gets that reference, you will earn a hero cookie.
Also R12 appears to be just a current sense resistor. Only reason they ask for a high precision resistor is for accurate stable results.
But as someone else pointed out, this is for charge current - with a 0 Ohm resistor, it'll charge with as much voltage as can be delivered, which likely will damage the battery
@@nemesis2264 Good jorb, you earned one cookie
Yeah i said it before, i'll say it again. I will not skip the rap. Love that shit.
Great Video !
Nice fix of a nice device, your face when you forgot to insert the sd card was priceless 🤣 very nice device to emulate btw.
See how amazing it is when a schematic is available. #righttorepair
nice
Ah the good old power managment chip.
The Genesis version of Beavis and Butthead is better, in my memory
Never played it before, I had no idea what was going on. Might give it another go! 👍
It’s a stupid game.
Those japan/sedan bars were pretty damn great! #neverskiptheraps
Hi sir. Can you please tell me any hope for my switch that I didn't charge or use one year and this time. Didn't won't to charge left it in charge for two days still nothing I tried hold for 20 second and nothing. It did this before and works but this time seem nothing:(