Comment by rolph
i thought this was going to involve capacitor plague. rather a retro dive into coding an 8bit digital fireplace.
i thought this was going to involve capacitor plague. rather a retro dive into coding an 8bit digital fireplace.
Fwiw, the c64 is pretty robust, if you don't use the original power supplies.
I'm surprised that people find this to be an example of clickbait. If I cared about views, I'd imagine an honest title like - "I turned my c64 into a digital fireplace" - would have probably been more appealing, no?
You’re surprised that people find a title of “Help! My c64 caught on fire!” to be clickbait in a case where your c64 did not catch on fire and you don’t need help?!
It’s an interesting article, but the title is a textbook example of clickbait and I’m surprised that you’re surprised.
i understand them but considering the project and its nature its a punny / good way of clickbait :D. lovely lil fireplace btw!
I recapped a C64C I bought second hand recently, using premium Japanese 105C capacitors off the shelf on akihabara, minus the huge axial one I ordered a modern, extremely durable replacement for.
I tested every cap I removed, all of them nichicons from the mid 80s. They all measured to spec.
So it was kinda pointless at the end. Sure, it is going to be good for a few more decades, alongside the 1571 Ultimate II-L.
(yes, I replaced the original PSU. I bought separate modern, safe 9vac and 5vdc PSUs and an adapter to join them into the C64 power connector)
Definitely a clickbait title. I thought it'd be about those infamous Rifa caps.