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I just received a Sharp
Twin Famicom with a non-working drive. From my preliminary inspection, I
found the following problems:
1. The female power plug receptacle is loose, I have to press it down
to
get it to boot up.
2. The FDS drive is not working.
3. There were missing screws to hold the cover together.
4. There were bite marks on the Player controllers. It looks like a
child
bit them.
5. The case had animal hair and cigarette ashes.
Other than the bite marks, I can either repair or clean the parts. I
suspect this is not going to be bad at all. The main Famicom cartridge
unit works flawlessly.
I inspected the FDS drive and the belt is melted and stuck together. This
is a very common problem and can easily be repaired with a belt change and
manual adjustment of the FDS drive motor.
The controllers are 100% fully functional but they visually look awful. I
may replace them with some spare controllers from an old Famicom that I
have.
The female power plug connections need to be reflowed with new solder. It
is really easy to do with the right tools.
I included pictures to show my findings. Look for more updates on this fun
little project to restore the Famicom twin to its full glory.




The
belt on the FDS drive was stretched and sticky. I removed the belt and
replaced it. While I inspected the drive, I found out this was the First
Famicom Drive that contained the 7201 Drive controller chip. What does
this mean? It means one can use FDS Loader and write to the drive. So, I
can dump disks as well as write to the FDS disk. Pretty cool.

However,
all is not done. When I tested the drive, I was getting a Disk
Error 22. I adjusted the speed down but still the same error. I proceeded
to try and adjust the Disk Head. Well, wouldn't you know, the adjustment
screw was stripped! I had a useless drive.
Well, not totally useless, I stripped the controller electronics from the
drive and replaced the copy-protected electronics on another one of my FDS
drive. I tested it an it works. I just have to make the cable to read/dump
FDS disks.
I had an extra FDS drive that I was planning to trade or sell on eBay. I
took the drive out of that one and installed it into the Twin Famicom. It
works!


So,
now I try and figure out what is wrong with the power supply female plug.
Here is a picture below.

I
inspect the solder connections and low and behold, there is a crack and
peel on the pcb. The trace is coming off. This makes sense though. I could
only get the Twin to power up when I pushed down on the plug. I had to do
this to make contact with the board. It looks like I have to run some
jumpers.
Here is the bad trace. You can see where it peeled.

And
here is where I soldered some wire jumpers.

I
tested it and it powered up fine! I am almost done.
So now, I have to clean all the cigarette ashes and cat/dog hairs. I
decided just to gut the Twin of its parts and wash the case. I basically
took a sponge with Palmolive and cleaned the case like I was cleaning
dishes. The case cleaned up nicely.
See!

I
then reassembled all the components and tested each component to make sure
it was working.
Here it is all clean and ready to go.

And
here it is all sealed up and ready to play!

Now,
I'm done. Overall it was a great project and now I have two working Twin
Famicom: Black and Red. I was kind off bummed about the FDS drive but I was
able to salvage the drive electronics for my FDS Loader project. So, it
really is not that hard to refurbish one of these babies. The next time
you see a non-working Twin Famicom on eBay, bid on it and refurbish it.
You just might see me bidding on it as well. |