The first thing that needed to be done was to gut the entire thing as well as cutting away some of the plastic to make room for the
Pi.


I needed to modify the start button so it would work with the Mausberry Circuit


I soldered wires to run from the pos and neg to the 12v to 5v step down converter.

Next step was working on the back panel.


Even though the Pi3 is set-up for WiFi, I still wanted an Ethernet connection, of course an HDMI out and the original power input. There was one other thing I needed to add. Remember I mentioned about putting the pop-up lid to use, I needed to attach a mcro snap switch to the back to turn on and off an LED that was going to turn on when the lid was open.


Hot glue has become one of my best friends in these builds.

Next step was fitting the PI in it's location.


In the picture you can see the mausberry circuit glued to the fan housing. Because there isn't room for the Mausberry to be directly attached to the Pi, I had to locate it somewhere else and run a cable from it, to the Pi.
This is the cable I used.

This cable proved to be a problem and had to be replaced with something else.
There is also a small circuit board plugged into one the the Pi's USB ports. The circuit is a 5v to 12v step-up converter that was going to be used to operate the Gamecube's fan. A big plus to using a Gamecube case is because it has a built-in fan, because the Pi3s run hot, this is a big bonus. Another thing about the Pi3s are, they are power hungry and the fan was just drawing too much power from the Pi, so this solution wasn't going to work.
Next step was the front panel, I didn't want to use the Gamecube's game controller input holes for controller inputs on this one, I wanted to add some lighting to the holes and use the memory card input holes for the game controller inputs. I also wanted to keep the original circuit board to help attach the lighting and to use the original power on light and reset button switch.
I carved out as much of the plastic as I could from the holes. The Atari, Nintendo, Sega and Playstation logos are going to be displayed in each hole, which accounts for 99.999% of the games. Them only games not made by one of these manufactures will be Dragon's Lair and Space Ace.