Forum to discuss all matters relating to the MPC1000 and MPC2500 operating systems created by 'JJ' (all versions).

By Mindzeye Thu Dec 20, 2007 6:14 am
The Grublet wrote:looks good, but not much different


in person its much better...maybe with a bigger pic too

its Long Beach Blue from the Acura NSX

By Rendr Thu Dec 20, 2007 10:22 pm
The screen on my mp started gettin a bit fuzzy and scratched, so I got a glazier mate to cut me a nice thick piece of glass to size.
Fits in perfectly under the faceplate.
Also makes the screen hella brighter, you just about need sunnies when you got it up to full brightness.
The glass is pretty tough, but i wouldn't reccomend doin it on one that travels a bit and might get something stacked on top of it.
Yo grublet, like your idea, did you just glue some plastic frame or something round the edge of the screen? Howzit sit up at the back?
Neat and tidy job as far as I can see....
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By The Grublet Thu Dec 20, 2007 10:41 pm
its Long Beach Blue from the Acura NSX


I always loved that color on my buddies car.


Yo grublet, like your idea, did you just glue some plastic frame or something round the edge of the screen? Howzit sit up at the back?
Neat and tidy job as far as I can see....



I used ABS plastic from the local stereo shop. It was 'pre-grooved' to let you slide a razor blade down the piece, making right angles perfect.
I removed the screen, made the pieces, and hot-glued it together internally (small amounts).


I am going to make a one-off in fiberglass when I have some time, so the entire case would be painted, and molded out of one piece, hiding the imperfections in the frame.

By Rendr Sat Dec 22, 2007 11:53 am
Yeah that would look slick. Another thing I was lookin into was somehow attaching some kind of battery casing on the side to fit aa's. That would then go to a small inverter which would then bypass the internal tranformer so the batteries don't get drained hella quick. I'd need to throw maybe a switch from ac to dc in there somewhere i reckon and a fuse incase i forget to switch to the tranformer after usin it on batteries. A bit of research to be done, but ima check it out. Anyone know about this sort of stuff hit me me some suggestions!(and no i aint gettin a 500, it aint the same :) )
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By The Grublet Sun Dec 23, 2007 7:45 am
not even close to enough power... 6 D's would last about 3 seconds.

By earwolf Sun Dec 23, 2007 2:03 pm
The Grublet wrote:not even close to enough power... 6 D's would last about 3 seconds.


i only need 2 seconds to make a banger son
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By CommanderRobot Sun Dec 23, 2007 2:58 pm
i just bought an used blue mpc 1000 case on ebay, i'm gonna pimp it and post some pics within the next month.

By dave_g Sun Dec 23, 2007 4:40 pm
Rendr wrote:Yeah that would look slick. Another thing I was lookin into was somehow attaching some kind of battery casing on the side to fit aa's. That would then go to a small inverter which would then bypass the internal tranformer so the batteries don't get drained hella quick. I'd need to throw maybe a switch from ac to dc in there somewhere i reckon and a fuse incase i forget to switch to the tranformer after usin it on batteries. A bit of research to be done, but ima check it out. Anyone know about this sort of stuff hit me me some suggestions!(and no i aint gettin a 500, it aint the same :) )



I think your final assesment that the 500 is not the same is correct...
The 500 doesn't have a mains transformer inside. Instead it has a low voltage DC input and a external transformer (like on a laptop computer).

I don't understand why you want to include an inverter. This converts DC to AC. You would then use the internal power supply to convert this AC back to DC; you would waste a lot of power doing this.

What you want to do is work out what DC voltage the internal PSU generates and put your switch here. When the switch is switched, you apply the voltage from the batteries via a diode. When it is unswitched you disconnect the battery. In both switch positions, the PSU output is always connected.

that would be the way I would do it. Best cells to use in your battery are lithium. Lithium ion are good, lithium polymer are lighter, higher capacity but more expensive.

It is worth having a facility to monitor the charge level too!

It should be reasonably easy to implement, providing you don't tinker around in the PSU section itself. (I.E. lethal voltages and nasty things like that)

I'm afraid I don't have the time (nor inclination tbh) to help on a project like this, but good luck.

By Rendr Mon Dec 24, 2007 6:00 am
cheers dave. I'm really keen on this idea coz i travel a lot and on an interstate bus or something it would be ideal.(data wheel and buttons would be pissin off the other passengers though!)