Tonight I took it easy. Instead of fine tuning the fit for the motherboard connections to the back of the case a little more I opted for some soldering.
I still needed to wire up the NES buttons to the motherboard connectors. Earlier on I butchered an old computer case I had lying around and ripped out the power switch, reset switch and LED indicators.
The NES reset button is a "momentary" push-button switch. That is, you push it in and the circuit is completed only while you hold it down, and when released it pops back out again, breaking the circuit. The NES power button is a "latching" push-button switch by default. That is, you push it in and it locks, completing the circuit as long as it's latched in the "in" position. You push it again and it pops back out, breaking the circuit. This may have worked nicely for the NES but won't work for a PC. To change it to a momentary switch I had to remove a little copper tab and staple shaped pin from the top. Pretty simple.
The wiring of the NES switches is as follows:
- Power = Red + Brown
- Reset = Orange + Yellow
- LED = Red + White
A quick cut to length of the switch wires, some solder, and the cables were complete... Mostly. I hooked up the power and reset switches. Still need to figure out what to do about the power indicator LED on the NES itself.
The way the NES works is that when the power switch is in its on position (as described above) the LED is also on. The LED is powered with the same power lead from the switch and a ground wire.
With the PC setup, using the now newly configured momentary power switch, the LED would also be on only for that split second the button is depressed when turning the PC on. Ideally I would like the LED to be powered from the motherboards power indicator leads. There is also the second indicator LED from the PC for hard drive activity. I may remove the existing NES LED and see if I can squeeze both the PC LEDs into the same hole (they're smaller in size and twice as bright). If that doesn't work I'll see if I can find a two color single LED and wire it up to both the power and hard drive activity leads.