today was productive. i got a super game boy, and i cleaned all my snes games, so they all work now. hooray for rubbing alcohol and q-tips
the nes is proving more troublesome. the problem there seems to be with the 72-pin connector as much as it is with the cartridges, and i'm having trouble cleaning the connector effectively even with the top cover off
i'll watch some videos tomorrow and see if i can make any progress. in the meantime i have cleaning kits in the mail for my consoles and carts
@typhlosion if the cleaning doesn't work try rebending the pins with a safety pin
@Axel_Hugsky yeah, i'll look into that if all else fails
it's weird because some of my carts work more or less without issue. some of them i have to jostle around and put pressure in different spots before they work, and some won't work *without* pressure. and when i do get one to work, it won't anymore if i take it out and put it in again. that inconsistency is part of why i think a dirty connector is the problem
@Axel_Hugsky then again, the connector doesnt seem to want to grip the carts much at all, so maybe it's the pins after all
@typhlosion another option for some reason is boiling it
@irenes "i wish i had a top loader" was uttered several times tonight
@typhlosion I've heard that the top-loader NES and original Famicom don't have the same problem so I'd assume it does have something to do with the front-loader's edge connector or the overly-complicated loading mechanism, yeah.
@typhlosion The pushing down on the pins, it should be permanent if that method is used.
what is it that makes the nes' pin connector so susceptible to having its pins bend out of place over time, anyway? as far as i know it only happens for the nes, not the snes or other such consoles. is it a front-loader thing?