BitBuilt Welcome Thread!

Wesk

Undervolting....
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Hello. I'm just someone that was looking to make a portable Wii. I have and intend to continue to look through guides and worklogs in order to gain a better understanding. Though there is an extensive amount of resources available, it definitely takes some looking into. For example, information on rewiring motherboard components after trimming is especially scarce. The Wii trimming guide offers some advice, but there is still a lot left for interpretation. Usually when a question about how to wire certain parts is asked, higher members of the forums just bark at people telling them to look at worklogs. What worklogs, exactly? Who cares, I guess. I'm all for doing research and committing fully to something, but I do think that this community is generally overhyped as a loving, welcoming group of enthusiasts. Additionally, there is no reason why a start to finish guide on how to portablize a console has not been made, especially when higher-ups makes it seem so easy and assumes that everyone has the knowledge that they have.
It's understandable that you feel that this community can seem a bit ....elitist... at times, I've seen and felt it too in the past few years of lurking here. What you need to understand though is that there is a metric-ton of information in this forum, whether it's in the guides, worklogs or videos that members post, you just need to look. The long time members can come across as arrogant because they get asked a LOT of the same questions over and over, questions that can be answered with just a little bit of research and patience.

Secondly, you say that there should be a start-to-end guide (and maybe there should be) but what you need to remember is this is not a job for a lot of the members here, it's a hobby. Be thankful for the information that is available and not disappointed for the information that's not. Maybe someone will make a full guide at some point but for now people will just need to research, learn, fail and then maybe get good.
 

cheese

the tallest memer in town
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For example, information on rewiring motherboard components after trimming is especially scarce. The Wii trimming guide offers some advice, but there is still a lot left for interpretation. Usually when a question about how to wire certain parts is asked, higher members of the forums just bark at people telling them to look at worklogs. What worklogs, exactly?
There isn't really much left up to interpretation, as every point people ask about (where to wire video, where to wire controllers, etc) are all labeled in the guide. We tried to make it as thorough as possible, and for the most part, you don't have to rewire much of anything that was originally on the board.

Wiring what you do need to isn't a complex process either, you solder a wire between the point labeled on the guide and the input/output/data line of the particular part you are wiring. As for worklogs, there are many in the different console sections (such as the wii, ps2, etc), and you can also check the cutting edge section for completed projects which almost always have links to worklogs and internal wiring pictures.

Additionally, we generally have less than polite responses to people when you can find the answer to their question by typing exactly what they asked into the search bar on the top right of the site, or questions that you can find by googling them (ie the answer is within the first few results, or sometimes even highlighted by google's algorithms as the correct answer)

Additionally, there is no reason why a start to finish guide on how to portablize a console has not been made, especially when higher-ups makes it seem so easy and assumes that everyone has the knowledge that they have.
I've seen a few start-to-finish guides for portables in the past (kasars gamecube guide, or tchay's unfinished video guides are a couple examples) which either are outdated almost as soon as they are written, contain mistakes that will trip new, inexperienced people up, or just generally give people confidence to dive into a project they aren't fully prepared for. We aren't here to hold everyone's hand through the process step by step, and while you don't need a degree in EE, you certainly need some knowledge to be able to finish a project like a portable (albeit less so as things like gman's PMS, and the G-Wii or Louii case models being freely available cut down on the things you have to create yourself).

We are just enthusiasts who have spent years of our life dedicated to these projects that we enjoy as we try to share our hobby with others. None of us make portables or run the site as a full time career, and most of us (myself included) have not been paid a dime for all the hundreds or thousands of hours (and thousands of $$$) we spent creating the guides, documentation, and other things associated with the site.
 

Stitches

2 and a Half Dollarydoos
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Hello. I'm just someone that was looking to make a portable Wii. I have and intend to continue to look through guides and worklogs in order to gain a better understanding. Though there is an extensive amount of resources available, it definitely takes some looking into.
It's a complicated engineering centered hobby where new techniques are being created every other week, extensive research is to be expected.
For example, information on rewiring motherboard components after trimming is especially scarce. The Wii trimming guide offers some advice, but there is still a lot left for interpretation.
Que? It's pretty well spelled out, we got pictures with marked traces and everything. There are also a billion worklogs you can look through to see how other people wired things to give you ideas.
Usually when a question about how to wire certain parts is asked, higher members of the forums just bark at people telling them to look at worklogs. What worklogs, exactly? Who cares, I guess.
The worklogs you can find in the respective section for that console? You can click the little blue "Worklog" badge next to the thread name in the list and it'll filter out all other threads so you can just read through the various worklogs. We get the same questions asked so wearily often that we sometimes get tired of runing through the same spiel. We aren't a call centre, we aren't being paid to read a script day in day out, we want to help, but we also aren't going to hold your hand. We have our own shit to do, our own projects to make, lives to live, we do this out of our free time. So yes, we expect you to do your own research, spend a few DAYS reading through all the relevent information (like we all did once upon a time), make a list of questions you can't find answers to, post them in a thread, and go from there.
I'm all for doing research and committing fully to something, but I do think that this community is generally overhyped as a loving, welcoming group of enthusiasts.
Then do the research and apply some common sense. We try to be as welcoming as we can, but sometimes it gets trying answering the same basic questions for the same kind of basic people who have trouble knowing which end of the soldering iron to hold, and often don't even listen to our answers when we're trying to help them. We generally follow the philosophy of "help those who help themselves". Put the effort in to doing it yourself, then when that fails ask for help and we will do our best.
Additionally, there is no reason why a start to finish guide on how to portablize a console has not been made, especially when higher-ups makes it seem so easy and assumes that everyone has the knowledge that they have.
Yes there is a reason. Time, money, constant advancement, quality control, reliability. That's 5 reasons, but you get the point. Techniques change constantly, so if we made an official full guide it would need changing constantly. Which would mean re-shooting, editing, paying for voiceover lines, probably buying new parts to do the video with, etc. So fuck off with your "no reason", we have in fact: reasons. Also, we never try to make it "seem easy". We CONSTANTLY tell people how difficult their plans are and try to steer new users toward the simplest techniques. This hobby isn't easy and we've never advertised it as such. Just look at the summer contest. Look at all the seasoned builders who entered, and look at how many have/are actually going to finish in time. We had several months and most will probably not finish, at least not to the full extent of what they planned for their entry. And we kinda can assume some level of knowledge, because it's ALL HERE. In worklogs and question threads galore. We do expect people to have a basic understanding of things like soldering and relocation because we have many guides with paintakingly contructed custom imagery, and links to many educational videos about soldering, what components do, how to move them, what equipment you need for certain jobs, where you can buy said parts and equipment, etc. Even if we didn't, we live in the Google age, all this and more can be discovered by asking Google if we come up empty or seemingly unhelpful.

I don't mean to be mean, but come on dude. We're a welcoming community for sure, and we want to be helpful, but we expect an amount of automomy. if hand holding is expected, you're in the wrong crowd. The passive aggressive accusations don't help either, and I'd be remiss of my position as the resident Australian if I failed to call you a cunt for having THAT as your opening post, ya cunt. Do your research, make a list of questions, make a thread, ask them there, you'll be surprised. K? K.
 

Shank

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Imagine spending all of your free time and disposable income for several years dedicated to a cause of advancing your hobby and teaching others to do so, only to be told you aren't doing enough.
 
Joined
Aug 20, 2019
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Hello guys, I am new here and willing to learn about console modding. Currently, I am trying to make my first Wii portable with MB trimming.
 
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Aug 23, 2019
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Hello, I have wanted to get into console portabalization since the early 2000's. I forgot about this and was recently reintroduced by one of gingerofmods youtube videos. I am excited to begin my hardware modification journey and am 100% ready to jack up some wii boards.
 
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Hello, everyone
I am Ari Wandani, and I go by ari. I was born and grew up in Sukabumi, West Java.
 

Hokuto

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Hello everyone!
It's been a while I'm watching on youtube some portables results and I think that the work of some people it's really amazing. Inspired by this site I'm trying to build a portable ps2 and I want to post a worklog. I hope this will not be my first and last project because next I want to build a portable Wii.
 
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Aug 25, 2019
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netherlands
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Hello guys! looking to make a wii portable, first one for a school project :)
 
Joined
Jul 31, 2019
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What's going on guys! New here but I've been doing some reading the last few weeks and I'm feeling ready to dive into my first portable. Here's to hopefully not destroying too many wiis before I have a working product lol
 
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What's going on guys! New here but I've been doing some reading the few weeks and I'm feeling ready to dive into my first portable. Here's to hopefully not destroying too many wiis before I have a working product lol
Welcome to the forum! This is an awesome place to be, congrats on starting your first portable! It's one of the most rewarding projects you can do imo. Good luck and keep us posted on your progress once you get into it!
 
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Hello my name is Dan I’m new to portable building and me and my dad are starting are first build a portable wii (the louii) I saw this video on YouTube and I thought it looked amazing. My Dad is good on the building side (auto electrician) but we have no experience in the hacking - software. The site looks amazing and we are about to start are research (a lot of reading and practice on the hacks)
Thanks for the amazing content and detail you guys have provided.
Can’t wait to get started, Thanks Dan
 
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