I moved this post from the Modretro forums seeing as the majority of users has moved here.
Enjoy!
This will be the worklog for a commission I'll be doing.
It will be a GameCube inside an official Wii U Gamepad shell I bought of ebay.
Client wants original Gamecube face buttons so I'll have to frankencase this baby quite good I assume.
6.2" LCD
7.2v 6800mAH Panasonic NCR18650 Li-ion Batteries
A Wasp Fusion for SD game loading with SWISS
DOL CPU 01 for trimming purposes.
4 player external support
AV out
126mb memorycard
SD-Gecko on Slot B
Zenloc Custom regulator
Rumble support
I'll update the first post.
Enjoy!
First parts arrived today.
Update 11/12/2015
Update 21/10/2015
I made cuts where I wanted the GC controller parts to be and used BISON Kombi Plastic epoxy to keep it all in place. This stuff dries quik and turn solid hard after about an hour or so.
To get the best result I mounted the 4 pieces separately, meaning day one was analog stick, day two... and so on. That way I was sure all was good and well. Between mountings I would sand the previous mounted component.
Result:
Finishing work still needed.
Update 28/02/2016
Update 26/03/2016
Update 12/08/2016
Enjoy!
This will be the worklog for a commission I'll be doing.
It will be a GameCube inside an official Wii U Gamepad shell I bought of ebay.
Client wants original Gamecube face buttons so I'll have to frankencase this baby quite good I assume.
6.2" LCD
7.2v 6800mAH Panasonic NCR18650 Li-ion Batteries
A Wasp Fusion for SD game loading with SWISS
DOL CPU 01 for trimming purposes.
4 player external support
AV out
126mb memorycard
SD-Gecko on Slot B
Zenloc Custom regulator
Rumble support
I'll update the first post.
Enjoy!
First parts arrived today.
Update 11/12/2015
Update 21/10/2015
I made cuts where I wanted the GC controller parts to be and used BISON Kombi Plastic epoxy to keep it all in place. This stuff dries quik and turn solid hard after about an hour or so.
To get the best result I mounted the 4 pieces separately, meaning day one was analog stick, day two... and so on. That way I was sure all was good and well. Between mountings I would sand the previous mounted component.
Result:
Finishing work still needed.
Update 28/02/2016
Update 26/03/2016
Update 12/08/2016