I like the vibrancy of the background. So many of the other retro repair videos have the same blue amazon mat on a neutral color desk. Great style difference
Hey, sorry to comment late, but why is the shield welded? can it just be placed/attached on the board? I don’t have a welder at home rn and was wondering if just placing it could cause any damage
Natalie, any ideas on the reason my GBC has no volume? I've cleaned the headphone jack, changed the caps, changed the speaker and still nothing. With headphones in, still nothing. Thanks! :)
check if pin 4 and 5 of the headphone jack have continuity. if you dont have a multimeter, solder a wire between the two. sometimes a headphone jack can look clean but be broken inside
I like the vibrancy of the background. So many of the other retro repair videos have the same blue amazon mat on a neutral color desk. Great style difference
Cool, another cleaning technique.
God bless Game Boy friends.
Awesome video and content Natalie! 😊👍
Wow, excellent work!
Great video!! Thanks I’ll give this a go with my sp
what's is the best temperature for the soldering iron to be working inside Gameboys ?
Hey, sorry to comment late, but why is the shield welded? can it just be placed/attached on the board? I don’t have a welder at home rn and was wondering if just placing it could cause any damage
Yeah you do unfortunately
Natalie, any ideas on the reason my GBC has no volume? I've cleaned the headphone jack, changed the caps, changed the speaker and still nothing. With headphones in, still nothing. Thanks! :)
check if pin 4 and 5 of the headphone jack have continuity. if you dont have a multimeter, solder a wire between the two. sometimes a headphone jack can look clean but be broken inside
@@NatalietheNerd yes, they have continuity
It can also be the potentiometer in some cases. Or broken vias/traces if there was ever any corrosion. ")