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Interesting, a paperclip? I never thought of that.
Well, what I did do was tell my friend, who's NES wouldn't play games 90% of the time and did the blue/black screen reset thing, to buy a new 72pin head from the GOAT Store like I did.
He said it didn't fix it, so I took it to my house, opened it up again, took off the 72pin head, and cleaned the contacts on the motherboard with qtips and alcohol.
I put the 72pin head back on, re-assembled the case, powered it up and, voila! It lives!
I wonder if it isn't the chips that go bad, but the 72pin contacts on the motherboard itself. Corrosion, like you suggested Nadius, is probably the leading cause of death in NES parts. Don't do drugs. |