![]() You can either post the info and photo links here as comments, or email them to me at bushing at gmail. I won’t publish this info individually, but I’m trying to show how the progression over time matches up with the software changes in my previous post. The Wii was purchased in 2009 and/or is “unsoftmoddable” / “LU64+” / has boot2v4Īny more details you can provide along with the picture would be appreciated - specifically, console ID, boot1 and boot2 versions, approximate date of purchase, serial number printed on outside of Wii.The heatsink is removed, and all of the writing on the two large chips (Hollywood and Broadway) is readable.Create a new folder on your SD card inside the apps folder called usbloadercfg. I would be interested in any photos people can give me of the PCBs of their Wii, particularly if Download the newest version of Configurable USB Loader from the project page (look under binaries). The PCB revision ID is found in the lower-right of the PCB, below the “Nintendo” logo. I’ll give more info about all of this in my next post, but in brief - I have only ever seen three PCB revisions on the Wii: ![]() The other options require tinkering with the filesystem and access to the NAND keys, which is a lot harder to do. I’m working on another post about the history of hardware revisions on the Wii, but am having trouble collecting the data that I need. Low-level install: Because boot2 is the same across all consoles, and boot1 is the same across a large group of consoles, you can just flash BootMii-boot2 onto any console using a dumb NAND programmer.
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