Talk:INES Mapper 160: Difference between revisions

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(even if *were* a real dump, it's still redundant with m79)
(rewrite one last time)
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Currently, FCEUX's source claims that [[iNES Mapper 160]] supposedly represents Sachen's SA009 board, containing ''Pyramid''. FCEUX's implementation shows exactly one bit of CHR banking (and is the identical behavior as a [[NINA-003-006|NINA-03]] game with 16 KiB CHR and 32 KiB PRG), but [https://www.flickr.com/photos/153392699@N08/sets/72157680764908921/ pictures of the PCB] show no backswitching hardware at all. It also can't represent Sachen's SA010 board containing ''Pyramid II'', because that requires PRG banking. — [[User:Lidnariq|Lidnariq]] ([[User talk:Lidnariq|talk]]) 15:53, 16 July 2017 (MDT)
Currently, FCEUX's source claims that [[iNES Mapper 160]] represents a board called "SA009" and implements exactly one bit of CHR banking, and is redundant to an undersize [[NINA-003-006|NINA-03]] game with 16 KiB CHR and 32 KiB PRG.
 
 
If SA009 means ''Sachen's'' SA-009 board, that contained ''Pyramid'', and that only has 16 KiB PRG and 8 KiB CHR. A [https://www.flickr.com/photos/153392699@N08/sets/72157680764908921/ picture of the PCB of a 72-pin release (TC-A001)] shows no backswitching hardware at all. —[[User:Lidnariq|Lidnariq]] ([[User talk:Lidnariq|talk]]) 15:50, 18 July 2017 (MDT)

Revision as of 21:50, 18 July 2017

Currently, FCEUX's source claims that iNES Mapper 160 represents a board called "SA009" and implements exactly one bit of CHR banking, and is redundant to an undersize NINA-03 game with 16 KiB CHR and 32 KiB PRG.


If SA009 means Sachen's SA-009 board, that contained Pyramid, and that only has 16 KiB PRG and 8 KiB CHR. A picture of the PCB of a 72-pin release (TC-A001) shows no backswitching hardware at all. —Lidnariq (talk) 15:50, 18 July 2017 (MDT)