
I have arthritis in my hands and am due for my first pair of bifocal glasses soon. The soldering for the cart reader is very manageable, I promise (and you only need to solder the first 8 pins). Sanding the sides prevented it from pushing away from the rear of the device and the cart edge had no issues after fixing the overall width. It seemed as if the cart edge was out of alignment as well, but it turns out the issue was the same as the tightness. As for the tight fit, I sanded down both skinny sides of my cart shell a bit and it glides in like butter now. Given you already own an EverSD the easiest solution for you is to buy a 512MB or smaller SD card for your EverSD.

(ALL carts are just FAT32 formatted SD Cards)ġ) even if you build your own cart out of a retail one it can't be larger than 512MB without using EverPatcher or doing the equivalent software changes on your ownĢ) Even if you take a retail cart apart and just swap the IC chip in it for a bigger one it STILL won't work without Patching the size limitation like #1ģ) Your EverSD with a 512MB or smaller SD card works on a factory Evercade with ZERO MODSĤ) Building a Cart reader and using one of the larger carts (like Worms Collection will get you the same results as #3ĥ) Soldering a cart reader is easier soldering work than Making your own EverSD since the IC chip has to be desoldered and a MicroSD slot needs to be soldered in its place. EverPatcher basically does three things:Ģ) It adds a second version of retroarch (without modifying the original one in any way at all)ģ) It circumvents the Evercade's ability to reject an SD card above 512MB in size. you already have.īuilding a cart reader would allow you to add to or erase a retail cart. Putting an SD slot in a retail cart is 100% identical to the EverSD.

If I got that correct it doesn't help your situation. Did you give up on a cart reader and now want to instead put an SD slot in a retail cart?
