Hey, stumbled across your site looking for some NES instruction manuals. Figured I'd "prove" myself with a short description of one of my many NES-related projects.
The NecrofamicomThough the Atari 2600 was the system that got me into videogaming, NES was the system that I grew up on. Up until very recently, I've been playing most of my NES through emulation. A friend and I even built several versions of a stripped-down Windows-based PC, The NESDES (NES Dedicated Emulation System) whose sole purpose was JUST to play NES games. Complete with original power/reset buttons, all input to the computer was supplied through REAL NES peripherals, as we wired NES ports to the system's motherboard. The project was fun, but I prefer playing my games on a real console.
My NES and games were pawned off long ago by my little brother, but I had recently begun picking up a few select titles, with no system to play them on. I decided I really wanted to get an NES hooked back up in my entertainment center, but I didn't want it to look out of place next to my black 'Cube and XBox. I started thinking of ways I could modify an NES to make it look sleeker and more modern next to my other consoles. I decided I would replace the red LED in the system with a blue one, paint the hole system black, and stencil a sprite on the top. I dubbed the project The Necrofamicom, and a friend with a spare NES gave me a free system.
I ended up running into LOTS of problems, ESPECIALLY with the stencilling. I had about half of a Drybones (the skeleton koopas from SMB3) on top, when I realized my paint was bleeding under the masking tape. I had to sand the ENTIRE paint job off and start the top of the system over again. I finally dropped the idea of painting a sprite on top, and left it as a black system with a blue LED.
Here's some pics
The "before" pic:

The first coat of paint

Some sprites I ripped while I was deciding what I would stencil on top. I was looking for sprites that fit the "death" theme for "Necrofamicom". The ORIGINAL idea was to use a poison mushroom from SMB2 (Jap), and I also considered Bob-ombs or Bullet Bills

This was the first power-up of the new blue LED after I got it soldered in. I honestly didn't think it would work. I'm REALLY bad at soldering

Here's a couple glam shots I took over at a friend's, where his PS2 took back seat to an all-night Necrofamicom party




Shortly after I had completed the system, I grew weary of how unreliable the NES is. The system I had was PARTICULARLY annoying, and I would have to fight games sometimes for several minutes to get them to work. I knew I needed a new 72-pin, so I called Nintendo, told them my NES never worked, and they sent me a shiny new 72-pin, free of charge:

About a week later, my connector came in the mail and I took the Necrofamicom apart one last time for the finishing touch: RELIABILITY.
The new connector:

The Necrofamicom with the lid removed:

The new connector in place:

The Necrofamicom now works FLAWLESSLY every time. All new cartridge purchases are THOROUGHLY cleaned before I use them, and I have a strict "no blowing" rule on all my games. No dust + no blowing = perfectly booting games. (The vapor in your breath and your saliva corrode the system's pins over time. NO BLOWING!)
During the Necrofamicom's construction, I came into possession of a couple more systems that I can tamper with in the future. As my first attempt at a console painting job, I'm pleased with how the paint job turned out, but know I could do better. My current plans for a Necrofamicom II are in the works. I plan on building a WHITE system with higher quality paints and my airbrush (instead of several coats of spraypaint + sanding between coats), a WHITE LED, custom "Necrofamicom" lettering on the lid, along with custom "power" and "reset" logos on the buttons. I plan on stencilling a white/gray Goomba from SMB1's dungeons (not the underground levels, the dungeons).
Anyway, hope you enjoyed reading and looking at the pictures. I may be hanging around this forum for a while, because I love the NES.
