"Best" PS2 model?

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mikejmoffitt
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by mikejmoffitt »

ross wrote:Supposedly, this is the only slim model that has the PS1 CPU on-board (apart from the SCPH-70001), with later models resorting to emulation for PS1 games, as well as being the only slim to have separate EE + GS chips.
Eh, is this confirmed? Or is this community hearsay?
Last edited by mikejmoffitt on Thu Nov 30, 2017 10:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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AndehX
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by AndehX »

the SCPH-70000 series is probably the best. It can also be modded to support SATA hard drives, which none of the other slims can do.
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FinalBaton
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by FinalBaton »

I remember Voultar vouching for one particular fat PS2 for having the best build quality, but I don't remember which one it is. I've seen other modders vouch for the same model too.
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citrus3000psi
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by citrus3000psi »

AndehX wrote:the SCPH-70000 series is probably the best. It can also be modded to support SATA hard drives, which none of the other slims can do.
Yeah but requires some work. Not direct drop in.

The best fat ps2 goes to a V7 or 3900x.


Pros
Solid laser, i-link support, perfect software compatibility, hard drive support

Cons
Noisy, no built in IR sensor, large

Best Slim is 7000x

Pros
Solid laser, perfect software compatibility, quiet, built in IR, small

Cons
No easy harddrive solution, I-link impossible
ZellSF
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by ZellSF »

I like my SCPH-5000x. It's quieter than the other fat PS2s I've heard and HDD compatibility is a must have for the PS2 IMO.
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FBX
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by FBX »

I've got a 30001 and a slim 70012. The 30001 I bought only needed a lens head cleaning and has been working flawlessly ever since. I really like it. The 70012 works fine too, but I don't like how hot it gets. When I feel the bottom of the unit after running for a while, it's very warm (almost hot) to the touch.
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tjstogy
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by tjstogy »

Heresy or Hearsay? :lol:
mikejmoffitt wrote:
ross wrote:Supposedly, this is the only slim model that has the PS1 CPU on-board (apart from the SCPH-70001), with later models resorting to emulation for PS1 games, as well as being the only slim to have separate EE + GS chips.
Eh, is this confirmed? Or is this community heresy?
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tjstogy
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by tjstogy »

Good to know, thanks. What's noisy- the fan or the optical drive? If it's the optical drive that's noisy, I wonder if there's a way to easily disable it for exclusive use with the hard drive....
citrus3000psi wrote:
The best fat ps2 goes to a V7 or 3900x.


Pros
Solid laser, i-link support, perfect software compatibility, hard drive support

Cons
Noisy, no built in IR sensor, large
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mikejmoffitt
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by mikejmoffitt »

tjstogy wrote:Heresy or Hearsay? :lol:
Whoops, yeah.
ross wrote:
mikejmoffitt wrote:
ross wrote:Supposedly, this is the only slim model that has the PS1 CPU on-board (apart from the SCPH-70001), with later models resorting to emulation for PS1 games, as well as being the only slim to have separate EE + GS chips.
Eh, is this confirmed? Or is this community heresy?
Well, it's confirmed by Voultar, who told the MLiG guys that the 7000X slims are essentially "perfect PS2s in miniature". Later models removed/replaced the PS1 chip which is why the SCPH-7500X and later models are incompatible with certain PS1 and PS2 games.

The bit about separate EE/GS chips and unified EE/GS chips is taken from Wikipedia, so it could be false, but it lines up with everything else we know.
All that tells us is that there's no discrete PS1 chipset. Do we have reason to believe the chipset isn't integrated into a later revision of the PS2 chipset? Remember that PS2 games used the PS1 chispet for I/O and some other small tasks; it didn't just sit there dormant when PS1 games weren't being played.
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Joelepain
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Joelepain »

I started a kind of similar thread some time ago.
Maybe you can find some useful information in it.

viewtopic.php?f=6&t=57674
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FinalBaton
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by FinalBaton »

Ah yes, that's it. The 3900x. thanks citrus3000psi!
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tjstogy
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by tjstogy »

So what's the quietest fat ps2 which accepts hard drives?
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by tongshadow »

Any Fat model from 39xxx to 50xxx is fine, and they have the most features and support hard drives.

Dont worry about the laser, they're cheap and easy to replace nowadays.

Try to find a hard modded model that has either the Matrix chip or Thunder Pro, they have nice features like DEV1 and DEV2 modes (memory card and HDD respectively). With this you can easily manage and transfer files between them and an USB pendrive. It's way easier and more " professional" compared to things like Free MCboot.
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Ashura
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Ashura »

Is there any place left to find these modded though? (Or someone who still mods them?) I've been poking around for the last three months and it feels like a needle in a haystack.
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AndehX
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by AndehX »

PS2's are not fun to mod. The mod chip is easily the most complicated and time consuming mod for any console. The hard drive mod for the 7000X is also pretty difficult too.
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Star1
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Star1 »

I modded mine this summer, so yes :P
I'm sure you can find someone who does this on order, but as a warning, my thread on installing a mod chip was deleted by the mods...

Edit, I did have a lot of fun doing it, it worked on the first attempt, but if I was to do it again, I'd do a lot of things differently.
It definitely was time consuming though.
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citrus3000psi
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by citrus3000psi »

Ashura wrote:Is there any place left to find these modded though? (Or someone who still mods them?) I've been poking around for the last three months and it feels like a needle in a haystack.
I do them from time to time.
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Ashura
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Ashura »

citrus3000psi wrote:
Ashura wrote:Is there any place left to find these modded though? (Or someone who still mods them?) I've been poking around for the last three months and it feels like a needle in a haystack.
I do them from time to time.
How much do you charge/what are your rates? Feel free to PM me so as not to clutter the thread! Note, I need to find a slim before I can hit 'go.'
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Lawfer »

tongshadow wrote:Try to find a hard modded model that has either the Matrix chip or Thunder Pro, they have nice features like DEV1 and DEV2 modes (memory card and HDD respectively). With this you can easily manage and transfer files between them and an USB pendrive. It's way easier and more " professional" compared to things like Free MCboot.
Is there any hardmod that let's you hardwire 480p as the default resolution (rather than relying on GSM)?
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Voultar »

ross wrote:
mikejmoffitt wrote:
ross wrote:Supposedly, this is the only slim model that has the PS1 CPU on-board (apart from the SCPH-70001), with later models resorting to emulation for PS1 games, as well as being the only slim to have separate EE + GS chips.
Eh, is this confirmed? Or is this community heresy?
Well, it's confirmed by Voultar, who told the MLiG guys that the 7000X slims are essentially "perfect PS2s in miniature". Later models removed/replaced the PS1 chip which is why the SCPH-7500X and later models are incompatible with certain PS1 and PS2 games.

The bit about separate EE/GS chips and unified EE/GS chips is taken from Wikipedia, so it could be false, but it lines up with everything else we know.
mikejmoffitt wrote:All that tells us is that there's no discrete PS1 chipset. Do we have reason to believe the chipset isn't integrated into a later revision of the PS2 chipset? Remember that PS2 games used the PS1 chispet for I/O and some other small tasks; it didn't just sit there dormant when PS1 games weren't being played.

An IBM ASIC replaced the R3000 post 7000X PS2 Slim models. DECKARD lacks the ability to execute MIPs instructions. As a result, not only did PS1 compatibility suffer, but PS2, as well.

If you're after a PS2 hard-mod and care about PS1 backups, find a V10 (SCPH-5000X).

If you have an SCPH-3000X and want a stable laser, grab a KHS-400C and install it. Load up PSLENSCHANGER to write the KHS-400C firmware into the NVRAM with the proper algo's for the MECHACON and it'll be super solid.

All phat models prior to the V9/V10 can't support PS1 backups with anti-mod technology. They can be patched, though.

I talked about this a few years ago here: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=56010
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by bobrocks95 »

Hey cool, I have a 39001, good to hear that they have good build quality.

Hopefully it lasts long enough for me to get over the fact that 95% of the library runs in 480i...
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by FBX »

bobrocks95 wrote:Hey cool, I have a 39001, good to hear that they have good build quality.

Hopefully it lasts long enough for me to get over the fact that 95% of the library runs in 480i...
My snowboard is in a 480p game for the PS2, so there's at least that :-P

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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by bobrocks95 »

FBX wrote:
bobrocks95 wrote:Hey cool, I have a 39001, good to hear that they have good build quality.

Hopefully it lasts long enough for me to get over the fact that 95% of the library runs in 480i...
My snowboard is in a 480p game for the PS2, so there's at least that :-P

Some of my earliest CGI work: http://www.merqurycity.com/ssx_forum/kn ... php?id=123


-FBX
Yeah, I've seen that before, cool stuff! Back when EA seemed to actually care about their fans...

I've spent probably 4x as much time fiddling with GSM than I have actually playing PS2 games. I finally gave up and moved my PS2 over to my CRT, but I was so burnt out on it that I haven't really done much with it since.
PS1 Disc-Based Game ID BIOS patch for MemCard Pro and SD2PSX automatic VMC switching.
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by RocketBelt »

You can use a Fat v7 ps2 fitted with the quiet fan assembly from v9. Best of both worlds.
Fitting the fan assembly from a v9 isn't even a mod, all you need is 15 minutes and a screwdriver.
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by citrus3000psi »

Lawfer wrote:
Is there any hardmod that let's you hardwire 480p as the default resolution (rather than relying on GSM)?
A matrix chip can force 960i output. Here’s a video of gt4 intro, https://youtu.be/jtJRU019lrc
Last edited by citrus3000psi on Mon Dec 04, 2017 3:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by BazookaBen »

Whatver you do, get a fat PS2. Putting games on hard drive allows games to load many times faster, and you have no region lock. Newer hard drive loaders have GSM built in, which allows you to force many PS2 games into 480p even though they didn't officially support it.
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by tongshadow »

citrus3000psi wrote:[quote="Lawfer”]

Is there any hardmod that let's you hardwire 480p as the default resolution (rather than relying on GSM)?
A matrix chip can force 960i output. Here’s a video of gt4 intro, https://youtu.be/jtJRU019lrc[/quote][/quote]
Doubt many TVs can handle this out-of-spec resolution though.
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Seraphic »

I am getting my SCPH 39001 cleaned up and modded right now with a Matrix modchip and adding a 1TB HDD for use with OSSC and CII.
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by nmalinoski »

ross wrote:
BazookaBen wrote:Whatver you do, get a fat PS2. Putting games on hard drive allows games to load many times faster, and you have no region lock. Newer hard drive loaders have GSM built in, which allows you to force many PS2 games into 480p even though they didn't officially support it.
I read that the GS runs at a different clock rate on PAL consoles, so NTSC games might run a tiny bit faster or slower. The difference probably wouldn't be noticeable though.
It'll be noticeable on music/rhythm games, when the notes gradually start to drift off-sync. :)
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Re: "Best" PS2 model?

Post by Voultar »

ross wrote:
BazookaBen wrote:Whatver you do, get a fat PS2. Putting games on hard drive allows games to load many times faster, and you have no region lock. Newer hard drive loaders have GSM built in, which allows you to force many PS2 games into 480p even though they didn't officially support it.
I read that the GS runs at a different clock rate on PAL consoles, so NTSC games might run a tiny bit faster or slower. The difference probably wouldn't be noticeable though.
Voultar wrote:
ross wrote:Well, it's confirmed by Voultar, who told the MLiG guys that the 7000X slims are essentially "perfect PS2s in miniature". Later models removed/replaced the PS1 chip which is why the SCPH-7500X and later models are incompatible with certain PS1 and PS2 games.

The bit about separate EE/GS chips and unified EE/GS chips is taken from Wikipedia, so it could be false, but it lines up with everything else we know.
mikejmoffitt wrote:All that tells us is that there's no discrete PS1 chipset. Do we have reason to believe the chipset isn't integrated into a later revision of the PS2 chipset? Remember that PS2 games used the PS1 chispet for I/O and some other small tasks; it didn't just sit there dormant when PS1 games weren't being played.

An IBM ASIC replaced the R3000 post 7000X PS2 Slim models. DECKARD lacks the ability to execute MIPs instructions. As a result, not only did PS1 compatibility suffer, but PS2, as well.

If you're after a PS2 hard-mod and care about PS1 backups, find a V10 (SCPH-5000X).

If you have an SCPH-3000X and want a stable laser, grab a KHS-400C and install it. Load up PSLENSCHANGER to write the KHS-400C firmware into the NVRAM with the proper algo's for the MECHACON and it'll be super solid.

All phat models prior to the V9/V10 can't support PS1 backups with anti-mod technology. They can be patched, though.

I talked about this a few years ago here: viewtopic.php?f=6&t=56010
Thanks, Voultar, some interesting stuff there.

Is it true that the R3000 is unused for PS1 games on 700XX models? How are they for reliability?
No, that's internet mythology. The R3KA is exercised just the same as it is on phat systems.

The V12 (7000X) and V9/10 (5000X) are electrically identical.
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