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Why using PSX-1001-Bios? Why not the PSOne-101Bios? #28

Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
I found this comment :

"might suggest that the "scph101.bin" PSOne BIOS is possibly the most stable 
even more so than the classic scph1001.bin used by many developers.

Have you seen this before guys? I found 2 list. I post this at MESS forum as 
well.

PSone model SCPH 100 - 101 - 102
Playstation model SCPH 1000, 1001, 1002 - Board PU7
Playstation model SCPH 1000, 1001, 1002 - Board PU8
Playstation model SCPH 5500, 5501, 5502, 5552 - Board PU18
Playstation model SCPH 7000, 7001, 7002, 7003 - Board PU20
Playstation model SCPH 7501, 7502 - Board PU22
Playstation model SCPH 9001, 9003 - Board PU23

==========================================================

# SCPH-1000 - The original badboy. Released in Japan on 12/3/94.
# SCPH-1001 - The original (North American) badboy. Released in North America 
on 9/9/95. Did not feature S-Video output port like the 1000.
# SCPH-1002 - The original (European) badboy. Had no S-Video like the 1001.
# SCPH-3000 - Japanese revision.
# SCPH-3500 - Japanese revision. No longer featured S-Video output port.
# SCPH-5003 - Asian revision.
# SCPH-5500 - Japanese revision. CD drive mech was relocated, onboard 
electronics shortened by ~20 percent, seperate ports for A/V composite output 
were replaced by the A/V Multi Out port.
# SCPH-5501 - North American version of the 5500.
# SCPH-5502 - European version of the 5500.
# SCPH-5552 - European revision.
# SCPH-5903 - Special white-colored "Video CD" edition of the PS, released only 
in greater Asia.
# SCPH-7000 - First Japanese 'Dual Shock' hardware revision. System now came 
with one Dual Shock (SCPH-1200) controller, and now featured a light show 
program called SoundScope in the CD player menu (this was actually a 
stripped-down version of Baby Universe).
# SCPH-7001 - North American 7000.
# SCPH-7002 - European 7000.
# SCPH-7003 - Asian 7000.
# SCPH-7500 - Japanese revision. More motherboard reductions, revised system 
BIOS. Sony released this as a "mod-proof" system, but was cracked pretty 
quickly (of course!).
# SCPH-7501 - North American 7500.
# SCPH-7502 - European 7500.
# SCPH-7503 - Updated Japanese 7500.
# SCPH-9000 - Japanese revision. More motherboard reductions, plus total 
removal of Parallel I/O port to try and foil those making cheat devices and 
other such products that fit into the port. Last PS hardware revision series 
until SCPH-100 redesign.
# SCPH-9001 - North American 9000.
# SCPH-9002 - European 9000.
# SCPH-9003 - Asian 9000.
# SCPH-100 - Also known as the PS one. Unit size reduced by one-third, power 
supplied by external AC adapter as opposed to internal power block. Revamped 
BIOS interface. Original Japanese version.
# SCPH-101 - North American 100.
# SCPH-102 - European 100.

Developer/Non-Consumer Editions:

# DTL-H1001 - Original blue-colored PS, only available to developers and gaming 
publications. Featured 8MB of RAM. Has no regional lockouts, so users are able 
to play all North American and Japanese software without fault, as well as 
pre-production software on CD-R media.
# DTL-H1201 - Revision of the H1001.
# DTL-H1001H - Grey version of DTL-H1001. Not much else known.
# DTL-3000 - Also known as the Net Yaroze. Enabled consumers to create their 
own PS software. Like the H1001, could play all manner of PS software.
# DTL-H3000
# DTL-H3001 - This and the H3000 are odd, seemingly consumer versions of the 
Net Yaroze, save for no inclusion of development accessories. Both are a 
lighter black, however, and have a textured crystalized paint finish. Known as 
the "PlayStation Worldwide."
# SCPH-2000 - Another all-region PS. Nothing else known. 

Found this comment at: 

http://southcentralemulation.blogspot.com/2006/12/ps2-bios-download-scph10000bin
-rom1bin.html

Original issue reported on code.google.com by atla...@googlemail.com on 27 Jul 2010 at 1:46