David Randolph from G4's ATOS built a portable retro gaming system from two Eittek Power Player game sets, a Clarion VMA5894 car head rest video screen and a project box. Link. If this looks a little familiar, it is, the GameGrrl uses a low cost LCD and Nintendo controller instead. Between these two resources you're likely to pull off this project and/or come up with new ideas.
Build Your Own Portable Retro Entertainment System
David Randolph from G4's ATOS built a portable retro gaming system from two Eittek Power Player game sets, a Clarion VMA5894 car head rest video screen and a project box. Link. If this looks a little familiar, it is, the GameGrrl uses a low cost LCD and Nintendo controller instead. Between these two resources you're likely to pull off this project and/or come up with new ideas.
Recent Entries
- Biohacked bacteria possibly useful for landmine detection
- Make: Holiday Gift Guide 2009: Mischief Maker's Gift Guide
- Grounding tips for mixed signal PCBs
- Virgil England's fantasy-land
- Novation Launchpad teardown
- Laptop Etch-a-Sketch via Arduino & Processing
- iPhone macro lens carousel
- New in the Maker Shed: OLLO kits
- BlueSMiRF found in credit card sniffer
- Mystery iPhone musical instrument - World's most expensive ocarina
Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
Leave a comment
Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!
Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.
$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)




































cool hack
Reply to this comment