Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see a real clone of the BBA that works identically to the real thing, but you're still going to have the problem of figuring out exactly how GAPS works. LIke I said, likely you'd need to have a BBA or two in order to actually study the behavior adequately with an oscilloscope. Also, you'd probably end up having to reverse engineer quite a bit of it from code that uses the device (and by that, I mean from official Sega code, not KallistiOS' driver, which would be easier to study to get the basics working).everynewday84 wrote:Sounds pretty easy. I'm going to run this by my stepdad, who is a retired electronics genius (The dude had his own electronics business until another electronics giant bought his business, and gave him a prestigious position at said electronics giant.). He has personally done something like this for me in the past, repairing parts of my guitar rig, by assembling/programming parts of his own. He's fixed shit for me that others told me was "beyond repair, you can't get those parts, they don't exist anymore" etc etc...
If one could be designed at a fair price, I'd be one of the first in line to get one, believe me.