It's piss easy to hack a PSP, any model. Ideally, you'd want an early 2000, really -- less ghosty screen, better D-pad, really early ones can make a Pandora battery [to restore from flash0 getting all hosed -- you'd be able to tell, power will come up for 20 seconds and the system will turn off, the screen will never light up -- remember that they're only for recovery and can't be used as a normal battery], can use a Pandora battery at all [very late model 2000s and later can't], no issue with permanent 6.60 CFW. Dunno why anyone would want a 1000, with its shit screen, dim backlight, and atrocious D-pad [what you describe is just standard operating procedure for the thing].gs68 wrote: I have a different problem with the PSP, specifically the 1000 model: The D-pad seems to have an allergy to diagonal presses. Playing Gradius Collection was a pain because of it.
I don't udnerstand why the 1000 is sought after by many people; maybe it has to do with hacking a PSP? I've never hacked mine (although I probably should because I want to play Danganronpa and I don't have a Vita for the official NA release.)
Speaking of Pandora batteries and flash0 corruption, now that I'm home I looked up why the PSP wasn't coming up. So, I made the battery [the hard way, involves wrenching the thing apart and cutting a pin to disable the battery's firmware [good thing I had a spare battery from a 1000]], made the recovery memory stick [when the battery has no firmware, it will check the memory stick for what to do apparently], and brought the thing back up.
and apparently, now that I'm home, the thing isn't constantly pressing right anymore, bah -- but it will if I start back playing with it...
It'd probably be an easy fix, but considering I have two ruined PSPs in my drawer [particularly the 1000, which is in many, many pieces], I'm not chancing it [gonna return this one].