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View Full Version : TUTORIAL: Make a Pandora's Battery without a homebrew PSP!



sourced
October 22nd, 2007, 11:02
Via iam7805@Benheck Forums (http://forums.benheck.com/viewtopic.php?t=21280)


Ok, so you want to unbrick or downgrade your PSP but don't have a PSP capable of running homebrew apps. No problem! In this tutorial I will show you how to modify the battery's hardware to make it activate service mode.

This is our victim (http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q32/iam7805/DSCF2040.jpg). Please note that while this concept may work on non-Sony batteries, only official batteries are guaranteed to have the same internals, so we recommend using one.

STEP 1:

The first thing you need to do is obviously crack open the battery. Surprisingly, the battery isn't very hard to get in to. In this picture (http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q32/iam7805/DSCF2041.jpg) you can see that I'm just using a guitar pick to slide in through an edge and slide around the perimeter of the battery to seperate the two halves.

STEP 2:

Next, we need to locate a certain chip. The chip has the model number S93C56 printed on it. We are going to need to desolder pin 5 and lift it off of the board. Here is a magnified view (http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q32/iam7805/DSCF2043.jpg)of the board, which shows where the chip is and which pin needs to be lifted.

Newer batteries have a much smaller board with a different layout. The same chip needs to have the pin lifted, but the chip is in a different position. Once you've located chip S93C56, the rest of the instructions are basically the same. This has been confirmed with the 2200 mAH Official Sony battery.

STEP 3:

If you are not confident in your soldering skills, have a less than steady hand or have a larger-than-optimal sized tip, please desolder the cell pack from the battery first. If you make contact between pins 5 and 6 then you will short ground to +3.6VDC! Not good! When desoldering the cell, only keep the iron on long enough to melt the solder. If you can, use a higher wattage iron so that the tip will be hotter, but you won't transfer as much heat to the cell pack. Remember that heat + Li-Ion battery = large explosion (t3h sux0r5, unless you get in on video. Seriously though, this operation is not for the faint hearted, and should definitely not be your first soldering experience. I recommend trying your hand on lifting the pins on an N64 CPU chip. Surely if you spend enough time here you have a couple killed N64 mobos laying around. )

Now is actually desoldering the pin. There are a few ways you could do this, but I think my method is the best because its less likely to damage components near by. Use an Xacto knife with a sharp tip and try to put it underneath the pin. Get somebody to hold a soldering iron (WITH A VERY FINE CONICAL TIP!) on the pin. When the solder melts you can pop the pin up with the knife. Be sure not to hold the iron on the board too long to avoid the lithium battery from getting too hot and exploding. When your done it will look something like this. (http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q32/iam7805/DSCF2048.jpg)

STEP 4:

Finally, close the battery's casing. Use some Krazy Glue to keep it closed, or just use electrical tape around the edges like I did. I don't actually recommend the electrical tape as it makes the battery very snug in the compartment and it takes a bit of force to get it out. You can use the battery just like a regular Pandora's battery. As for getting the Memory Stick files, I can tell you that they are out there and you can find them after a bit of Googling. However, I can't tell you exactly where to find them as they contain copyrighted Sony code, and sharing them is illegal.

How does this work?

The pin that we just lifted was actually the ground pin of the EEPROM. Removing this pin effectively shuts off the EEPROM. When the microcontroller inside the battery tries to read the EEPROM, it will think the EEPROM contains all 1s (in binary). This is because of the pull-up resistors on the data lines. So the microcontroller returns a serial number of 0xFFFFFFFF to the PSP, which then goes into service mode.

Thank you for reading this, and if you have any questions, make sure to post and I'll try to help you!

-iam

I myself prefer the original option to this but each to their own

Johnny Rash
October 22nd, 2007, 11:08
Ah, a way for the Slim batteries, you say?

You don't need to solder on a wire for the phat.

All you have to do is take off the ground pin for the EEPROM.

sourced
October 22nd, 2007, 12:32
really? i didnt know that for the phat. lol.

i hope i make frontpage again :p

Cloudhunter
October 22nd, 2007, 17:54
Personally, I would rather put a switch on the wire, for easy switching :)

Cloudy

joesnose
October 22nd, 2007, 20:57
heres a video of a switchable pandora battery : http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=vJS1FaI0ak4
i used the force to solder it.

Bobtentpeg
October 22nd, 2007, 22:12
Wow, this is about a month old, and I;m prety sure its been posted but maybe not

sourced
October 22nd, 2007, 23:12
hey, who edited my post? i didnt write all of that.. :O

Johnny Rash
October 23rd, 2007, 01:11
hey, who edited my post? i didnt write all of that.. :O

It's magic, sourced.

alexvander
October 23rd, 2007, 01:23
as bobtentpeg said this is old news

Johnny Rash
October 23rd, 2007, 01:28
as bobtentpeg said this is old news

Yes, but it's obvious that some people still didn't know about this.

Perhaps this will help more people downgrade and enjoy homebrew.

sourced
October 23rd, 2007, 05:52
It's magic, sourced.

but seriously. what i posted was totally different. where did all this come from?

BelmontSlayer
October 23rd, 2007, 07:25
but seriously. what i posted was totally different. where did all this come from?

Mods and staff can edit your posts.

Johnny Rash
October 23rd, 2007, 08:18
Doesn't it usually say like

"Edited by BLAH at BLAH o'clock"?

Something like that.

sourced
October 24th, 2007, 05:46
Mods and staff can edit your posts.

but it doesn't say who edited it..

Tonx_9
October 24th, 2007, 09:53
lol...i forcfully cracked open my battery....used a knife and riped the pinn off the mobo...it touched the wire next to it and smoked...but it all works...now i have a ****ed battery exept if i use an ac charger first....thx for the 1.50 fw you rock!!

Johnny Rash
October 24th, 2007, 09:57
lol...i forcfully cracked open my battery....used a knife and riped the pinn off the mobo...it touched the wire next to it and smoked...but it all works...now i have a ****ed battery exept if i use an ac charger first....thx for the 1.50 fw you rock!!


You're welcome.

What you did is dangerous.

You could have potentially injured yourself.

But now you can enjoy homebrew!

kevintrooper
October 29th, 2007, 03:44
can someone please gie me a good deal for a slim and phat compat battery? i cant find one on e-bay cuz they all include chips

cam902
November 9th, 2007, 02:51
Would just cutting the leg with wire cutters work? and if so could I solder it back together and use it as a regular battery again?

Vampiriclayer
November 12th, 2007, 20:32
So by just doing this, you create a pandora battery?

I have never soldered before, but where do i get the tools for it?

v10m
November 21st, 2007, 20:56
my psp battery doesn't have the chip, it's a psp 1000 but there is just a big metal thing in the battery case

ilovepspgaming
November 26th, 2007, 15:59
Hi, Thanks for this great info!
I tried this and successfully downgraded my PSP !!

However, while converting it to panodora, (lifting lead 5), I accidentially shorted pins 5,6 and I am now left with this problem:

Charge level 45%
Hours left:----
Power source: external
Battery Status: Charge complete

it wouldn;t charge beyond 45% :(

I searched around for a solution and I found someone with battery stuck at 0%. It was mentioned there to short the + and -

for 1 second. It worked for them but It did not help in my case. (tried a few times).

I am badly stuck with 45% :( :( :(
Did anybody face similar problem and had a solution, please let me know....

PS: the 45% varies .. some times it is 46, 44 etc. The battery works fine for 2 hours. and it charges fine .. but only upto

45% . :(

Any help is highly appreciated !!
Thanks in advance !
-Shibs.

b=o=b
November 29th, 2007, 23:30
ok
>>so doin that to the battery makes it a pandora's

>>>>battery that unbricks and puts psp back to

>>v1.5??:confused:

>can u downgrade phat psp 3.72 wit only the pandoras battery

>>>(if not and u need the majic mem. stick can u re use the mem stick for other stuff)

twinturbo300zx
December 12th, 2007, 08:15
well, knowing that fake sony batterys cant be pandoraize i tryed this method on two different fake sony battery and it didnt work on none... what a waste of batterys

i recommend you dont do it this way and just make a pandora battery through 1.5/cfw

masterpsp1
April 4th, 2008, 15:22
Can't u just take a slim battery and put it in a fat psp ? ? ? im new to this

minidibs
April 4th, 2008, 20:02
:DTaking apart a battery is really stupid. There lypo they blow up. Unless it's not sony.

ben13//_u
June 4th, 2008, 02:29
does it work on any ofw? do i still need a magic memory stick ? where do i get the files to convert my memory stick in to a magic memory stick?

ben13//_u
June 4th, 2008, 19:22
since i don't need a psp with cfw , do i need any files? wich ones i have over 30pandora battery making related files, but witch ones specificly to downgrade my psp (ofw version 3.95)?

lbinc
June 10th, 2008, 11:05
With PSP Pandora Battery (http://www.laptopbattery-inc.co.uk/pandora-battery-for-sony-any-version-psp-p-469.html), you can unbrick & downgrade any version psp to version 1.5.
http://www.laptopbattery-inc.co.uk/images/PandoraBattery.jpg

Twimfy
June 11th, 2008, 17:33
There's a slightly easier way to do this without soldering or risking shorting the pins. Simply find the pin that needs lifting and find the trace on the circuit board. Get a razor blade and slice through the trace.

Granted you lose your battery but I used this method on a PSP slim 2005 with the default battery model no. PSP-S110 and it worked like a charm.

SkipperSam
February 22nd, 2009, 14:06
Hi,

I've cracked open my battery, and it looks like this:

http://i40.tinypic.com/dmrz9f.jpg

http://i44.tinypic.com/1ny9o6.jpg

I can't find a tutorial anywhere that says which chip i should mess with, and I cant find one saying ICO4 etc..


Thanks for any help!

-Skipper


EDIT:


my psp battery doesn't have the chip, it's a psp 1000 but there is just a big metal thing in the battery case

I think this might be what I've got.

n00bzown
April 9th, 2009, 02:51
heey, good tutorial, for ppl who cant afford, or there parents dont give them money for a new battery, my simple fix is this...
when you have your CFW on your psp, you can covert your magic memory stick back to normal, and your battery, well, wont be so normal..., so find a app, called " PSP tool " and in it, it will display a bunch of things... do this when it load's:
open battery options. click check battery serial.
if it sayes service mode battery, then procede..
go back to main menu of psp tool., open memory stick options: and click, inject ipl to memory stick. then chose, inject z3ros0ul single/multi IPL, and that will allow you to, boot your psp from the pandora battery as normal, works for me, i dont need a new battery :) , and if you want to put cfw on any of your buddies psp, just erease the IPL, and dont use any ipl for theres, and follow instuctions on the 1st page.
have fun :)