video is a bit blurry for me. I can tell where you soldered the ground cable to, but where did you solder the power/red wire to on the left side of the board there?
I was sent over here by the people at Digimon 0nl1ne and loved the video, very informative! I am thinking about doing this mod, but maybe adding a tiny switch to toggle the light for strictly night use. I am also interested in doing the LED mod that was mentioned in another comment. If you had any information on that, it would be greatly appreciated!
so i melted off the chip that you soldered it to and the digimon still works however i think it takes longer to time the screen out now, do you know if there is another place i can solder the positive to have the same effect of turning on and off with the screen
Yes and no? On these they are a bit of an odd speaker. One method ive seen is making a hole in the back right over it to let me sound escape the shell. you might be able to fit a tiny tiny tiny board to push the speaker to its limit for sound. lastly, ive seen people use an LED rather than mess with the other options so they can visually see the vpet needing attention rather than listening to it only.
You can! If you follow the steps in this video up until right before soldering the positive and negative cables to the main board you can continue instead by connecting to a small on/off switch and then drilling two holes in the case to the battery compartment to add a second battery in order to power it separately as shown in this video by Digital AK: ua-cam.com/video/8oCtowm0V38/v-deo.html This will alter your shell more, both by drilling the side to add a switch and also the modifications to fit an extra battery, but if your willing to put in the extra careful shell modification you can get an on/off switch with separate battery in there as well!
@AceDynasty-nx8wk If you run the power cables to a separate battery you would not need any resistors. I did mod mine exactly the same as I said in this comment a couple days ago and had trouble fitting the additional battery in the battery compartment, even after trimming. Another way you can do it is add a switch on the line to the screen from the positive on the motherboard. I'm going to change mine to do that now. That way you have the option to turn it on/off and only need to have a single battery in it. Keep in mind, if you want to do it that way though, you'd need the resistor. TLDR: Use a resistor only if your drawing power from the Digimon's existing battery and not if your adding an additional battery
@@TheNoobPan can I dm you? I was just about to do the way with 2 batteries as I’ve done it that way before but using 3mm diodes with a on/off switch instead of a screen. Very interested on the way you mentioned with putting a switch on the line to the board.
@@TheNoobPan also if I run a switch from the line on the screen to the positive on the motherboard, does that mean nothing will be wired to the negative
I have tried to solder the wire to the backlight been weeks😂and yet to get it connect together
Great insight as to how you do it though
🙏🏼 thank you
video is a bit blurry for me. I can tell where you soldered the ground cable to, but where did you solder the power/red wire to on the left side of the board there?
ah rewinded. you said "c8" it just wasn't like something you majorly pointed out so I missed you causally saying that lol.
@@Soul94255 sorry, I’m not the best at video making lol.
i jumped. thought i was in trouble and had to go to time out for a second
I was sent over here by the people at Digimon 0nl1ne and loved the video, very informative! I am thinking about doing this mod, but maybe adding a tiny switch to toggle the light for strictly night use.
I am also interested in doing the LED mod that was mentioned in another comment. If you had any information on that, it would be greatly appreciated!
I installed a backlight and it's no longer easily viewable head on. I have turn tilt it back before it becomes visible. How do I fix this?
so i melted off the chip that you soldered it to and the digimon still works however i think it takes longer to time the screen out now, do you know if there is another place i can solder the positive to have the same effect of turning on and off with the screen
How longer batteries run out with mod test
Is there away to make screen a bit bigger ?
Do you think there is a way to make these devices any louder? I've noticed they are a bit on the quiet side
Yes and no? On these they are a bit of an odd speaker. One method ive seen is making a hole in the back right over it to let me sound escape the shell. you might be able to fit a tiny tiny tiny board to push the speaker to its limit for sound. lastly, ive seen people use an LED rather than mess with the other options so they can visually see the vpet needing attention rather than listening to it only.
Nice
Any way to turn off the screen by pressing any button?
I want it to turn off or the battery will die faster D=
You can! If you follow the steps in this video up until right before soldering the positive and negative cables to the main board you can continue instead by connecting to a small on/off switch and then drilling two holes in the case to the battery compartment to add a second battery in order to power it separately as shown in this video by Digital AK: ua-cam.com/video/8oCtowm0V38/v-deo.html
This will alter your shell more, both by drilling the side to add a switch and also the modifications to fit an extra battery, but if your willing to put in the extra careful shell modification you can get an on/off switch with separate battery in there as well!
@@TheNoobPan do I need the resistors still if I do this way?
@AceDynasty-nx8wk If you run the power cables to a separate battery you would not need any resistors. I did mod mine exactly the same as I said in this comment a couple days ago and had trouble fitting the additional battery in the battery compartment, even after trimming. Another way you can do it is add a switch on the line to the screen from the positive on the motherboard. I'm going to change mine to do that now. That way you have the option to turn it on/off and only need to have a single battery in it. Keep in mind, if you want to do it that way though, you'd need the resistor.
TLDR: Use a resistor only if your drawing power from the Digimon's existing battery and not if your adding an additional battery
@@TheNoobPan can I dm you? I was just about to do the way with 2 batteries as I’ve done it that way before but using 3mm diodes with a on/off switch instead of a screen.
Very interested on the way you mentioned with putting a switch on the line to the board.
@@TheNoobPan also if I run a switch from the line on the screen to the positive on the motherboard, does that mean nothing will be wired to the negative
Lol do you offer your services 😅