Well, ethan this is the diagram that i followed...
And yes the waranty is now void. but i believe it\'s worth it for the increase of quality during DVD playback.
1st there are 6 screws on the back of the PS2 -
4 where you pull out the rubber feet and 2 under those center covers (remove these two with a knife)
Unscrew these and remove the bottom panel. Note: you will have to
remove the security sticker - THIS WILL VIOD YOUR WARRANTY!
This will then show a metal plate held by a single screw, Remove this and your\'e ready to operate..
You need a steady hand and make sure that you touch a earth or something to discharge your body of static!
E.G. a copper pipe or grounding rod or something like that.
Locate the above on your board (It\'s in one of the corners - you can\'t miss it)
Simply solder as shown in the diagram, but believe me THE POINT NEXT TO THAT RESISTOR IS SMALL!!!
It took me a couple of attempts to get the solder to take to this small point. What i usually do is \'tin\' the wire
first (this means use solder and coat the end of the wires using a soldering iron. once you have done this
snip the end of the tinned wire to siut that of the points on the board.
now basically you will need quite a bit of heat on that small point but don\'t get to near that resistor or overheat
the board.
Common sense is all you need. Heat just enough for it to stick onto the point. Now check carefully then reassemble.
Job done...
The picture is a lot brighter and there is no dotcrawl. I tried disney\'s Dinosaur on DVD (one of my kids dvds)
and the result was very good quality. The scene selection sections of the DVD truely shown wat a difference it made without dotcrawl. also the overall
picture quality was heaps better.
Think about it first tho\' Ethan, i wouldn\'t want you to screw your PS2 just because of me.
Think of it this way.... Will it benifit you? do you play lots of dvd\'s or do you just want to have a full RGB PS2
Ask yourself these questions and take your time. Iv\'e been pondering this for ages and given it considerable thought.
If you are good with a soldering iron then there should be no problem, but be carefull.