Where do you attach all of the wires on a 6 switch model, I’m quite confused as my board looks nothing like this. Example r206 for the audio has a resistor in it. Do I remove that?
Appreciate the video, but I had bad luck modding my 2600a Rev. 13, 4 switch. I couldn't get the colors right no matter how I adjusted the wheel. They were just way too dark. White was grey. I found some other people online had the same issue and there wasn't a consensus on how to fix it. I ended up undoing the mod & soldering all the old parts back in place. Afterward the RF looked fine, so I'll stick with that. I regret drilling holes in the case, but at least I have fresh capacitors!
On an Atari 2600 Rev16, my R206 doesn't have an extra through-hole. But the capacitor (C208 I think) next to it does and it matches the layout of the board in this video. Should I use that through-hole or solder to the resistor itself of R206? If I still go to R206, which side of the resistor do I solder to?
Hello my friend, In which resistance should I put the audio cable? (is it the third or fourth?) Please your help with that which does not look good in the video. Kind regards
Because televisions have both the red and the white. If you only had one jack, you could only use one cable, which would mean the sound would only come from one TV speaker.
CommodoreKazz Cool. I remember the woody Atari from back then. The store, that also sold electronic components had it. I was rather interested in programming than in gaming. One day, I should search for my old Compute magazines in the attic. Would be fun to see all the old advertisements:-)
Where is part 3?
Where do you attach all of the wires on a 6 switch model, I’m quite confused as my board looks nothing like this. Example r206 for the audio has a resistor in it. Do I remove that?
Appreciate the video, but I had bad luck modding my 2600a Rev. 13, 4 switch. I couldn't get the colors right no matter how I adjusted the wheel. They were just way too dark. White was grey. I found some other people online had the same issue and there wasn't a consensus on how to fix it. I ended up undoing the mod & soldering all the old parts back in place. Afterward the RF looked fine, so I'll stick with that. I regret drilling holes in the case, but at least I have fresh capacitors!
Hi Kazz
Did you ever do the atari 2600 pause/LED mod, and if so where can I find it.
Cheers,
Mark
On an Atari 2600 Rev16, my R206 doesn't have an extra through-hole. But the capacitor (C208 I think) next to it does and it matches the layout of the board in this video. Should I use that through-hole or solder to the resistor itself of R206? If I still go to R206, which side of the resistor do I solder to?
Wheres part 3?!?!?!
Hello my friend,
In which resistance should I put the audio cable? (is it the third or fourth?)
Please your help with that which does not look good in the video.
Kind regards
Connect the white wire to R206. That’s your audio output.
If it is only a mono circuit why put a red and white rc jack and not just a red or white ???
Because televisions have both the red and the white. If you only had one jack, you could only use one cable, which would mean the sound would only come from one TV speaker.
If you go on console 5 he has a wiki and you can download the factory repair manual and it shows all that
El Gato means "The Cat" because it's founder lives in Los Gatos, CA.
Did you shoot the 3rd part?
Not yet. Been crazy busy. I’ll hoping this week.
CommodoreKazz Cool. I remember the woody Atari from back then. The store, that also sold electronic components had it. I was rather interested in programming than in gaming. One day, I should search for my old Compute magazines in the attic. Would be fun to see all the old advertisements:-)
@@CommodoreKazz Friend, do you already have the link to the third video?
I want to install the 2 KITs that I buy for my 2 Atari 2600 consoles.
Darn! I was hoping for part 3 but it appears you have moved on from this account... or life happened...
The bad part about the video is the audio is so low. I couldnt watch it. Sorry.