peachey777
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Your correct in most cases. I have come across a few that have them switched. Sadly cheap china made cables done always follow standard. You only really need the 4 wires and in that case just follow the port outs. There isnt alot of room in there so keep them as short as you can but still workable. Make sure you tin the wires first as you dont want to apply to much heat to the jaguars MOBO. Ive modded alot of my systems with Svideo and combo Composit. Thanks for the help. I'm going to try this pretty soon and I'll post my results.
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I am going to give my Jaguar an s-video port. I am using an s-video jack from a keystone plug, so basically its an s-video coupler. On the inside of the Jaguar, I will have an s-video cable plugged into to it, and then soldered to the board. I know where to solder, but I'm not sure which wires are ground, luminance, and chrominance. I posted pictures of the wires. Thanks
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I might not find out until to find out until I get the commodore up and running, but that sounds like it might be right
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Just something I found that I thought was pretty cool. It's a pretty small book, 18 pages. EDIT: I should have looked at this site for this book first. Turns out this site has scans of all the pages http://www.atariage.com/catalog_thumbs.html?CatalogID=6
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It's not on a sticker, it's part of the cartridge. It also says the same thing on the other side. It's hard to see because it's all just black, but this picture isn't too bad.
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I recently just found this cartridge and I have no idea what it is. All I know is it fits in the Commodore 64 cartridge slot. The only markings it has are on the side. It says "Xante Tulsa Ok". Typing that into Google I found this article on Atari age of all places http://www.atariage.com/company_page.html?SystemID=2600&CompanyID=94 It seems related to what the article is talking about. Does anyone know what this thing is? I posted on a Commodore 64 forum and so far no one knows, but since that search I did always brings up Atari results, I thought I would post here too.
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Thanks zylon! The voltage regulator worked perfectly.
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Cool thanks! I'll give that a try sometime today
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Hey everyone. My cousin gave me a whole bunch of his old video game stuff. One of the systems was a 2600. It most likely hasn't been used since the 80's. Anyways, I thought it was completely dead, but then I figured out how to turn it on. If I flip the power switch to on, then plug the power cable into it, it will turn on. It will not not turn on any other way. It would seem to me, that something is wrong with the power switch? I opened it up and checked all the solder points on the switch and they look fine to me. Any ideas?
