Step 2Gather Tools and Parts
- Soldering iron
- Solder
- Multimeter or Continuity tester
Other items can certainly help with soldering, but are almost never required for building a cable such as this:
- Flux
- Desolder pump or copper braid
- 'Helping Hands'
The parts we need are extremely simple
- Cable for the console cable to be created. This can come from a sacrifice controller or from a cheap extension cable for that system. The SNES cable used in this example came from a controller that would no longer register a 'down' direction, and was bought as a dead controller for $1 from a local game store.
- DB-15 male plug with solder cup connectors. Digikey Part No. 215ME-ND , or available at any good electronics store. The chance of it being a good electronics store is directly, inversely, proportional to the number of HDTV's they sell. This is one of the few electronics parts that you can still find at some Radio Shacks.
- DB-15 Hood. The one used in the pictures here is Digikey Part No. 972-15SY-ND , but there are tons of D-Sub hoods made. You can also find these for cheap in most good electronics stores. I highly recommend that whatever hood you get, make sure to get thumbscrews to go with.
- Wire. The wire used here is 30 AWG Kynar wire, available from Fry's. Just about any kind of wire can be used, but using a very small guage will make things much easier.
Components other than these are needed for some consoles, however they are the exception, not the rule. As of this writing, the only systems that require anything more than wire are the FM-Towns system (detailed in neogeo.h) and the 3DO system (detailed in 3do.h)
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