Holly
March 2nd, 2009, 03:08 AM
I do not believe this has been posted in a while, so I figured I would pass it along just in case.
Like many NES owners, I was dismayed a few years ago when I turned on my system only to get the wonderful blinking blue screen. I tried all of the usual quick fixes - blowing in the cartridge and the system, cleaning the cartridge, et cetera. Still, my trusty old NES refused to read the game, and I was out my past time :(
I appealed to this forum back then, wondering how I could fix the NES. Apparently there is a piece called the 72-pin connector that tends to be faulty on the front-loading NES systems. This is the piece that the games actually plug into. After years of wear and tear, the connection tends to not be as good. However, you can buy a replacement piece off an auction site on the internet (I got mine off eBay in '01 for $12) and replace it yourself. Taking the system apart is really easy...just make sure you don't make the mistake I did and use a magnetic tip screwdriver! (oops!) Still, it worked. Since the connector is brand-new, I sometimes have to push a little to get the game to go in, but I haven't had a single blinking blue (or gray) screen since replacing the piece.
I hope this information is useful to some of you :)
Like many NES owners, I was dismayed a few years ago when I turned on my system only to get the wonderful blinking blue screen. I tried all of the usual quick fixes - blowing in the cartridge and the system, cleaning the cartridge, et cetera. Still, my trusty old NES refused to read the game, and I was out my past time :(
I appealed to this forum back then, wondering how I could fix the NES. Apparently there is a piece called the 72-pin connector that tends to be faulty on the front-loading NES systems. This is the piece that the games actually plug into. After years of wear and tear, the connection tends to not be as good. However, you can buy a replacement piece off an auction site on the internet (I got mine off eBay in '01 for $12) and replace it yourself. Taking the system apart is really easy...just make sure you don't make the mistake I did and use a magnetic tip screwdriver! (oops!) Still, it worked. Since the connector is brand-new, I sometimes have to push a little to get the game to go in, but I haven't had a single blinking blue (or gray) screen since replacing the piece.
I hope this information is useful to some of you :)