- Joined
- Feb 20, 2023
- Messages
- 64
- Likes
- 32
It seems like the Turbo Express / PC Engine GT is like an endangered species at this point, and I'm wondering if it can be saved. Here's what I mean.
They didn't make a ton of those systems to begin with, and they notoriously suffer from very bad capacitors. I've worked on two, and the corrosion that the caps caused to the boards was way worse than anything I've seen on other consoles/handhelds, including the Sega Game Gear. So now, they're very expensive to buy, and pretty difficult to repair.
It's such a cool system that was incredibly ahead of its time, and I hate to see it pretty much going extinct.
I was thinking that it might possible to make it cheaper/easier for enthusiasts to put one together. If the board could be mapped out, and made available for printing with PCBway, I think that would make things much easier. I think the main chips (HuC6260, HuC6270, and HuC6280) could be sourced from the much more common PC Engine systems. And I think Wesk created scan files of the case. The case and board would need to be updated to accommodate a different screen.
Any thoughts? Do you think the expense/effort would still be too high to be worth it for most folks who are into this type of hobby? Any gotchas that I'm missing?
They didn't make a ton of those systems to begin with, and they notoriously suffer from very bad capacitors. I've worked on two, and the corrosion that the caps caused to the boards was way worse than anything I've seen on other consoles/handhelds, including the Sega Game Gear. So now, they're very expensive to buy, and pretty difficult to repair.
It's such a cool system that was incredibly ahead of its time, and I hate to see it pretty much going extinct.
I was thinking that it might possible to make it cheaper/easier for enthusiasts to put one together. If the board could be mapped out, and made available for printing with PCBway, I think that would make things much easier. I think the main chips (HuC6260, HuC6270, and HuC6280) could be sourced from the much more common PC Engine systems. And I think Wesk created scan files of the case. The case and board would need to be updated to accommodate a different screen.
Any thoughts? Do you think the expense/effort would still be too high to be worth it for most folks who are into this type of hobby? Any gotchas that I'm missing?