Yes another thread by me! well I just discovered the cd-i so you guys will have to excuse me for spamming the forum , I just wanted to show off my successfull battery replacement on a cd-i 450 , I spent some 6 hours on this bastard!
Theres no way of doing this in a gentle way and I can say that the Time keeper IC can take a punch in the nuts and still survive so its not as fragile as you might think.
This very simple tutorial is great , I highly recommend all unemployed cd-i owners with alot of time to try it;) http://cdii.blogspot.com/2009/03/pictur ... epair.html
Successful battery replacement on a 450 :)
I just successfully did the same on my 450 this afternoon, although my job looks more sloppy
Sorry, I didn't take any pics, but I am going to attempt the same on my 220 in the near future so maybe I will have some then.
I can only say that I am no pro at modding, just intermediate, but I actually did this in a rush and it works great.
One thing I didn't do, however, was cut the casing all around the original battery and remove it. I just exposed the contacts at the end of the chip and disconnected the positive.
Anyway, thanks to everyone for the info. Nice to be able to finally save games.
Sorry, I didn't take any pics, but I am going to attempt the same on my 220 in the near future so maybe I will have some then.
I can only say that I am no pro at modding, just intermediate, but I actually did this in a rush and it works great.
One thing I didn't do, however, was cut the casing all around the original battery and remove it. I just exposed the contacts at the end of the chip and disconnected the positive.
Anyway, thanks to everyone for the info. Nice to be able to finally save games.
Success on my 220/37 as well. At first I was thrown off because my time keeper chip said M48T08B-15 instead of M48T08 150 (and also didn't say "Lithium Battery" on the chip), but after seeing the pics at this page http://www.richardlagendijk.nl/cip/arti ... keeper_fix I felt brave enough to try it.
Same procedure and works great. Still no pics because my wife was away with the camera. But yes, this method is a great solution.
Same procedure and works great. Still no pics because my wife was away with the camera. But yes, this method is a great solution.
And, just finished a successful mod on my 910/17P. It was a lot tighter job as the chip was right next to the power supply connector and casing, but I still did it without removing the board. 3 in one week. This mod is easier than it seems, I didn't spend more than 1 hour on each. Mostly a ball shaped dremmel type tool on an electric drill, then just minor scraping and soldering.
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