DS Overclocking Help Needed
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- Cycotic
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- Location:Somewhere in the Land of, um.... Place.
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Has anyone on these forums successfully accomplished an overclocking of the DS? I'm currently in the attempt, but my DS doesn't boot (the green power light comes on, but no OS screen appears). Does anyone have any ideas as to my problem? I think it's possible that I wired my oscillator wrong, as when the connector snapped off of the C2 connection, I switched the wires on my oscillator and my DS stopped working (it had worked beforehand with everything wired, but the overclocking didn't take effect for some reason when the switch was thrown). Is it possible that there is one specific way to wire an oscillator? I haven't tried resoldering the connections yet, but my oscillator is completely unmarked, except for its specifications, so there are no indications of how it should be wired.
Also, this is most likely a total newbie question, but... Where does the ground have to be wired? Do I just leave it hanging out wherever, or does it need to be soldered somewhere onto my DS mobo? Right now, my grounding wire leads to absolutely nowhere, so could that be the problem?
I will post pictures if anyone thinks it will help (although you may not want to, my soldering skills aren't so great... Experienced solderers will most likely scream themselves to death.).
Thanks for reading all of my questions, and I appreciate any and all help!
Also, this is most likely a total newbie question, but... Where does the ground have to be wired? Do I just leave it hanging out wherever, or does it need to be soldered somewhere onto my DS mobo? Right now, my grounding wire leads to absolutely nowhere, so could that be the problem?
I will post pictures if anyone thinks it will help (although you may not want to, my soldering skills aren't so great... Experienced solderers will most likely scream themselves to death.).
Thanks for reading all of my questions, and I appreciate any and all help!
The marshmallows are coming...
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
Welcome to the forums, dude.
About the ground thing, solder to ground! Find a ground point on the DS - it may be labeled, or you can find it on any component.
There can be a few things wrong:
1) You could've gotten the power line and the clock output line mixed up.
2) It may be to low or high of a clock speed.
3) You didn't solder the clock line to the clock point on the pcb well enough, check for loose connections and if you soldered to the right point.
4) The wire from the ceramic resonator/oscillator's clock line wire might be too long, physcially.
If you can take pictures of the solder job and such, that'd be great.
About the ground thing, solder to ground! Find a ground point on the DS - it may be labeled, or you can find it on any component.
There can be a few things wrong:
1) You could've gotten the power line and the clock output line mixed up.
2) It may be to low or high of a clock speed.
3) You didn't solder the clock line to the clock point on the pcb well enough, check for loose connections and if you soldered to the right point.
4) The wire from the ceramic resonator/oscillator's clock line wire might be too long, physcially.
If you can take pictures of the solder job and such, that'd be great.
Might wanna check out the topic I started awhile back...
- Kurt_
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If you didn't know that ground wires had to be hooked up to ground, then I would recommend posting some pictures so we can take a looksie at it.Also, this is most likely a total newbie question, but... Where does the ground have to be wired? Do I just leave it hanging out wherever, or does it need to be soldered somewhere onto my DS mobo? Right now, my grounding wire leads to absolutely nowhere, so could that be the problem?
I will post pictures if anyone thinks it will help (although you may not want to, my soldering skills aren't so great... Experienced solderers will most likely scream themselves to death.).
Hey, sup?
- Cycotic
- Posts:9
- Joined:Thu Aug 10, 2006 10:48 pm
- Location:Somewhere in the Land of, um.... Place.
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Skyone: Thanks for all of your help! I will check all of these things you suggested and see if they help.However, another question of mine is, does the wiring of the actual oscillator make a difference? I.E. is each post supposed to be used for a certain purpose or does it matter? Also, what would be the optimum length for that specific wire? Currently, its around 4 inches from soldering point to oscillator. Is that too long?Skyone wrote:Welcome to the forums, dude.
About the ground thing, solder to ground! Find a ground point on the DS - it may be labeled, or you can find it on any component.
There can be a few things wrong:
1) You could've gotten the power line and the clock output line mixed up.
2) It may be to low or high of a clock speed.
3) You didn't solder the clock line to the clock point on the pcb well enough, check for loose connections and if you soldered to the right point.
4) The wire from the ceramic resonator/oscillator's clock line wire might be too long, physcially.
If you can take pictures of the solder job and such, that'd be great.
sgtPepper: Thanks for giving me the thread, I appreciate it!
Krepticor/Skyone: I'm using a 24 MHz oscillator, as the guide suggested... According to the guide, it gives around 1.7 times the speed of normal operation. I was thinking of going over that to get 2x speed, but since I have never overclocked before, I though it best to follow the guide.
Thanks again to everyone's help! Also, I'll get pictures as soon as I can get my hands on a camera.
The marshmallows are coming...
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
- Cycotic
- Posts:9
- Joined:Thu Aug 10, 2006 10:48 pm
- Location:Somewhere in the Land of, um.... Place.
- Contact:
Pictures!
Here are the pictures of my soldering, as well as my oscillator and SPST switch assembly. Warning, these are NOT 56k friendly!
What my DS looks like when power is switched on
The only picture of my soldering job that came out right
A picture of the front of my oscillator
The back of my oscillator
My switch and oscillator assembly
And another question, I can't find the ground anywhere on the DS mobo... Does anyone know where it is, so I can wire my oscillator to it? Also, I just noticed the small black dot on my oscillator's front while taking pictures. Would that have any meaning, or is it just a dot?
If anyone wants more pictures, I'll gladly take more! Thanks all!
What my DS looks like when power is switched on
The only picture of my soldering job that came out right
A picture of the front of my oscillator
The back of my oscillator
My switch and oscillator assembly
And another question, I can't find the ground anywhere on the DS mobo... Does anyone know where it is, so I can wire my oscillator to it? Also, I just noticed the small black dot on my oscillator's front while taking pictures. Would that have any meaning, or is it just a dot?
If anyone wants more pictures, I'll gladly take more! Thanks all!
The marshmallows are coming...
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
- Cycotic
- Posts:9
- Joined:Thu Aug 10, 2006 10:48 pm
- Location:Somewhere in the Land of, um.... Place.
- Contact:
Oscillator?
Well, the guide I used -- located here says to use an oscillator... I'm beginning to fear that I screwed up the other jumps (it looks to me like the solder is gone from R2 and looks like E12). I tried jumping them, but it didn't work. I'm still at a loss as to what I should do... I tried rewiring my oscillator in a couiple different ways, but it didn't work. Should I simply desolder everything and see if my DS works without my assembly?
The marshmallows are coming...
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
- Cycotic
- Posts:9
- Joined:Thu Aug 10, 2006 10:48 pm
- Location:Somewhere in the Land of, um.... Place.
- Contact:
Alright, thanks Kurt! I'll go try wiring it to my battery right now and see if it helps.
EDIT: I tried wiring the ground to the battery's negative terminal, then connecting everything, and my DS LED turned on for a split second, then shut off. Now it won't even turn on at all, in any switch position, whether the ground is wired or not...
EDIT: I tried wiring the ground to the battery's negative terminal, then connecting everything, and my DS LED turned on for a split second, then shut off. Now it won't even turn on at all, in any switch position, whether the ground is wired or not...
The marshmallows are coming...
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
- Kurt_
- Portablizer
- Posts:5748
- Joined:Thu Nov 24, 2005 10:32 am
- Steam ID:kurbert
- Location:Ontario, Canada
- Contact:
Let me rephrase that.
The black dot on the oscillator represents PIN #1. REDO THOSE CONNECTIONS so that they hook up to the right places. Otherwise it won't work, because you'll be mixing up the connections. One is the Input voltage, one is the output, and one is ground.
EDIT: Sounds like you blew the fuse. Know what you're doing first, then we'll tell you how to jump it. Check your connections for shorts, and that they're connected properly.
The black dot on the oscillator represents PIN #1. REDO THOSE CONNECTIONS so that they hook up to the right places. Otherwise it won't work, because you'll be mixing up the connections. One is the Input voltage, one is the output, and one is ground.
EDIT: Sounds like you blew the fuse. Know what you're doing first, then we'll tell you how to jump it. Check your connections for shorts, and that they're connected properly.
Hey, sup?
- Cycotic
- Posts:9
- Joined:Thu Aug 10, 2006 10:48 pm
- Location:Somewhere in the Land of, um.... Place.
- Contact:
Alright, I see... But, first of all, as you can see in the picture of my oscillator, there are four posts, and anyway, what would Pin #1 actually BE? Input, output, or ground? And, anyway, even then, would I rotate clockwise or counterclockwise from pin no. 1 to get to the respective others? Finally, what would the mystery fourth post do? I'm sorry, this is the first time I've used an oscillator, so I'm rather inexperienced...
The marshmallows are coming...
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>
"I'm getting one of those, y'know, headaches with pictures!"
"...An idea?"
"Mm! Mmhmm!" - Fry and Leela, <i>Futurama</i>