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Mulbin

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Posts posted by Mulbin


  1. Hi all,

     

    I've had a missing pin for ages in the data port at the side of my Atari 400 (where the disk drive or cassette plugs in) and it still worked...but now another has dropped off through wear and it no longer functions!

     

    Is there;

     

    A. An off the shelf replacement for these sockets.

    B. A tutorial in making and soldering new pins.

     

    I really don't want to spend the next year looking for a donor computer!


  2. There's also this 52K RAM card for the 400, all of the first batch are sold but there should be more made depending on demand.

     

    http://atariage.com/forums/topic/267042-new-hardware-atari-400-ram-card-4852-kb-external-os-rom/page-1?do=findComment&comment=3791461

     

    Thanks for the heads up! I now have both of his cards installed - 48/52k card and his amazing s-video CPU card (wow, crystal sharp image now!). My 400 now thinks it's an 800!

    • Like 1

  3. http://atariage.com/forums/topic/109732-atari-400-48k-memory-upgrade/

     

    Been a looooong time since I did one of these but I think the pdf in the thread above may have been what I used. The factory kit was much easier.

    Thanks, but that's the piggyback method I'm trying to avoid. According to the guy supplying the kit I've pictured you can simply pop the original chips out and replace, not piggyback solder on top of the original chips.

     

    Here's the link to the kit. Says you replace chips, not piggyback. But sadly not available to me in the UK.

     

    http://www.ebay.com/itm/Atari-400-48k-RAM-Memory-Upgrade-Parts-/222663061346?hash=item33d7c0af62:g:DnwAAOSwCU1Y4WoV


  4. Hi all,

     

    I have a standard UK PAL 400 with 16k and I'd really like to upgrade to 48k. Sadly Best Electronics ran out of their upgrades a couple of years ago so I only have a few options left!

     

    1. Is anyone selling an upgrade kit to the UK?

     

    2. If not, then can anyone help me source the components and instructions I need? I'm not keen on the work/risk involved with the piggy back method but I've heard that, as I have a socketed board, I can simply replace the chips rather than solder on top of them.

     

    I've seen this kit on ebay US... but sadly it's not available for shipping to the UK. Anyone know what the hidden components are and how I go about fitting them all?

     

    qD2vdec.jpg


  5. Hi all,

     

    I've finally got my 400 and 410 up and running nicely, but now I need some software! I have some .cas files and have found a very old utility called cas2wav but it doesn't work on any modern 64bit operating system. Anyone know of a more up to date bit of software I could use?

     

    I already have all the recording equipment ready as I used to transfer commodore .tap files to real tapes for a VIC-20


  6. I think you've misunderstood my question. I have no interest in "going back to the original power supply". I simply want to know if you can convert a US 410 (which has no transformer, just a fixed cable with 110v plug) to a UK 410 (which has a round socket to attach a 6v DV transformer).

     

    If I understand your original posts, are you saying that I can simply chop the US plug off the mains cable then attach a 6v adaptor directly to that same peice of cable?... surely it needs 110 volts? Not 6? I was imagining the solution to involve openening the case and soldering a new power supply somewhere to bypass all the circuitry that usually converts the 110v to 6V, but if as you say I can simply connect the mains wire to 6v and it will still work that's great... if that's the case.


  7. Hi all,

     

    As many of you probably know the UK 410s weren't hard wired with a power cable like the US ones, they came with a socket for a 6v power adaptor. I'm in the UK and have a US 410 which obviously isn't compatible with out 220v outlets.

     

    I could buy a step-down converter to provide it with 110v but they cost nearly as much as the drive! Can anyone tell me if it's possible to rewire it to take a 6v adaptor? Presumably this would mean bypassing a 110v-6v adaptor of some sort built in to the drive.

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