- those are ceramic capacitors. They have no polarity. Assigning +/- makes no sense. I would actually emphesize to purchase +/- 20% caps rather than than ones that go up to 80%
In that photo, yes, but some people use tantalums or others which ARE polarized so the labeling is still provided for whatever capacitors you do have, polarized or not. Why would I take away the labeling just for the one case used there ? That would not make sense, more info is better and helpful for noobs starting out...
Steve has taught people plenty of times on the ease of ceramics, though they do get expensive going up from these ranges. I also have a mistrust of them since a prior digikey purchase. I bought four 100 uF capacitors for my SNES but all of them only measured 60 uF when tested. All the 10 uF ones I bought were good showing 9.X uF when tested. Steve thinks I just got a really bad batch that time. It does seem like they clock in lower usually compared to other types.
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=13231.msg287992#msg287992In the above photo in the link, polarized models are used.
- ground is ground. There's no such thing as better ground than another one. If you had "different" grounds you'd have a potential difference. Bad things happen in circuit boards (shorts, fires, death)
I think the massive ground plain which the caps connect to now is sufficient.
I have to check who made that finding. I'll see what Steve says about it.
errrm, massive noob question... When installing the ceramic caps on 41 and 43, does one scratch off the green masking to reveal copper to which the ceramic is soldered to?
Yeah, that is a massive noob question.
Of course, no bond or conductivity can occur if you don't.
Also, you can use tantalum capacitors if you have 'em, just mind the polarity in that case.
EDIT: On tapping ground from pins 55+56, that was a Steve recommendation and also is shown in an online RGB mod video.
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=13231.msg301235#msg301235Keith Courage once noted that ground from pins 55+56 made the jailbar situation worse for one of the models he was modding though. But Steve thinks the grounding was bad to the chip so that's an oddball case.
I can't agree with the statement, "
Ground is ground. There's no such thing as better ground than another one." That'd be like saying the same thing about the best place to tap the +5V source which is the output leg of the regulator versus from the A/V output. Anywhere else, you're adding the resistance of the traces and causing a voltage drop. And as we know, tapping from the regulator leg solves the problem with those powered region mods when using flashcarts.
The same thing about resistance and interference or whatever else should apply on determining the best place to tap ground as it does for the +5V source in principle.
EDITx2: Also, ConHuevos solved jailbars on his model with 220 uF caps in parallel to .1 uF as it didn't work with 22 uF for him.
http://www.pcenginefx.com/forums/index.php?topic=13231.msg320288#msg320288So, more things to try if the main suggestions don't help, FYI to others.