ya, they're pretty inexpensive nowadays you can also bid for them on eBay and get them cheaper i went a little crazy got 4 from ebay for about 2$ each and then 3 more locally for about 5$. bargain my manWhere is best place to buy old wiis specialy the rv 40+ on ebay i found like 3 for under 30USD and some of them are as cheap as you will think they are stolen?
Thanks i forgot to read the text on the image.Read all the text in that image and the custom regulator guide.
Thanks i forgot to read the text on the image.
Yes. That is why the picture shows them bridged.Are these bottom pins(at 6th window) meant to be merged? I now gave up 15mins trying to unbridge them. And which trace should i cut on rvl 001?
and which trace should be cut on rvl-001?Yes. That is why the picture shows them bridged.
The trace is in an internal layer. When you trim the board you also cut the trace.and which trace should be cut on rvl-001?
So on rvl-001 i dont need to cut anything just wire it to the gpu/cpu pin right?The trace is in an internal layer. When you trim the board you also cut the trace.
CorrectSo on rvl-001 i dont need to cut anything just wire it to the gpu/cpu pin right?
You should have a variety, 220, 400, 600, 800, maybe even 1,000 if you wantHow big the sand paper should be? The most i got from local shop is P220. Are there any spots to test continuity between layers on RVL-01?
American or Europe measuring system? because what i seen somewhere my P220 is actually 440 in american.You should have a variety, 220, 400, 600, 800, maybe even 1,000 if you want
that would be american but I am not sure the difference.American or Europe measuring system? because what i seen somewhere my P220 is actually 440 in american.
Mainly tolerances, but there's actually a chart for it. 220 grit is pretty much the same on both scales, anything above that is where the differences start to show. Australia uses the P scale, so I can say that I recommend using 220 > 320 > 400 > 600 > 800 for board sanding (add some 1000 onto the end there if you want to be extra safe). For plastic sanding or case work, 600 is the max I've ever needed to use for non-wet sanding applications, and 800 is the highest I've needed for paint. Always do it in steps, though. Most coarse to most fine, skipping steps is what ruins paint jobs and leaves copper hairs on boards.that would be american but I am not sure the difference.