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Tenshi Hinanawi edited this page Feb 28, 2013 · 3 revisions

The PSP has a smorgasbord of different motherboards, each with different abilities and restrictions. They all support the same custom firmware and homebrew nowadays, but to a different extent, so it is important to identify which motherboard you use with the below tools and our motherboard table.

Table of Contents

Table

The motherboard table can be said to be the periodic table of the PSP; it is the fundamental to understanding which PSPs support which CFW installation method. Since the motherboard table has never been built in it's entirety, we took the effort to build one ourselves on this wiki. Credits to antonizoon, MrShyCity, and DWG21R.

Motherboard PSP Model Generation cIPL 6.20 Perma Patch Temporary CFW (LCFW) Create Pandora Pandora Unbrick Lowest Possible OFW
TA-079v1 Fat 1000 01g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 1.00
TA-079v2 Fat 1000 01g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 1.00
TA-079v3 Fat 1000 01g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 1.00
TA-081 Fat 1000 01g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 1.00
TA-082 Fat 1000 01g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 1.00
TA-086 Fat 1000 01g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 1.00
TA-085v1 Slim 2000 02g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) YES YES 3.60
TA-085v2 Slim 2000 02g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) NO YES 3.60
TA-088v1 Slim 2000 02g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) NO YES 3.60
TA-088v2 Slim 2000 02g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) NO YES 3.60
TA-088v3 Slim 2000 02g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 3.9x/4.0x
TA-090v1 Slim 2000 02g 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 ME-1.8 (Use cIPL Instead) (Use cIPL Instead) NO YES 3.60
TA-090v2 Brite 3000 03g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 4.20
TA-090v3 Brite 3000 03g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 4.20
TA-091 Go N1000 05g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 5.70 (05g)
TA-092 Brite 3000 03g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 4.20
TA-093 Brite 3000 04g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 5.70 (04g)
TA-094 Go N1000 05g NO 6.20 PRO-C 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 5.70 (05g)
TA-095v1 (07g) Brite 3000 07g NO NO 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 6.30
TA-095v2 (07g) Brite 3000 07g NO NO 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 6.30
TA-095v1 (09g) Brite 3000 09g NO 6.20 PRO-C (Chronoswitch) 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 5.70 (04g)
TA-095v2 (09g) Brite 3000 09g NO 6.20 PRO-C (Chronoswitch) 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 5.70 (04g)
TA-096 Street E1000 11g NO NO 6.60 PRO-C or 6.60 LME-1.8 NO NO 6.50

Table Notes

  • TA-095v1 (09g) and TA-095v2 (09g) have been shown to be functionally compatible with (04g) motherboards, allowing a downgrade to 6.20 using Chronoswitch. After using this downgrader, to upgrade above 6.20 you must use a special upgrade app .
  • Some PSP Identification programs have recognized a non-existent "TA-090v3" motherboard. This is a typo, it is actually a "TA-090v2" motherboard. But to reduce confusion, we have added it to the chart with the same attributes as a "TA-090v2".

Image Tables

These are the outdated originals. Only kept for archival purposes, don't use them.

File:DWG21R-Hackable-PSPs.png

<gallery> File:MrShyCity_PSP_Motherboard_Overview.png|MrShyCity's Original 2012 PSP Motherboard list. File:DWG21R-Hackable-PSPs.png|DWG21R's picture that started it all. </gallery>

Identifying your PSP Motherboard

Temporary CFW (LCFW)

In order to use PSP identification software, we will need custom firmware (CFW) installed. This is no longer a Chicken-and-Egg problem as life was in the Dark Days, since Temporary Custom Firmware (LCFW) works on any PSP without risk of bricking.

    • In theory, you are finished, since custom firmware is already installed to your PSP.
    • Continue only if you want to install CFW permanently (which does not bring much benefit anyway) and your PSP motherboard supports cIPL or 6.20 Permapatching (use PSPIdent and check the table).

PSPIdent

  1. Make sure Temporary Custom Firmware or equivalent is installed.
  2. Download PSPIdent v0.75 and extract the archive.
  3. Copy the PSPIDENT folder under the /PSP/GAME/ folder in the PSP's memory stick.
  4. Run PSPIdent from the XMB (main PSP menu), under Games -> Memory Stick.
  5. PSPIdent will display your motherboard model. Check the motherboard table on this page to see which method is right for you.
  6. Press Circle to create a screenshot for later use, and keep that picture in a safe place on your computer for reference.
  7. Press Home to exit PSPIdent.

Sources

BA Logo

Bibliotheca Anonoma

Android Development Codex

Note: All non-Android projects have moved to the BASLQC Wiki.

Introduction

  • Introduction - A quick intro to the rationale and ideals of this guide, and smartphone modding in general.
  • General Setup - Learn how to install and run the tools you need to succeed.
  • Device Guides - Customized, fully decked out guides for rooting each and every device we could find.
  • General OS Customizations - General customizations that work on all devices of a specific OS.

Content Guidelines

  • General Guidelines - The ideals that you should uphold while working with and editing this guide.
  • Device Guide Templates - Templates and general guidelines for creating customized guides for a device.
  • Linux - Run a full desktop OS on your little mobile device; research is being made to make it comfortable to use in the mobile space.

Reference

  • Glossary - Contains all the crazy acronyms and word soup that you'll need to wade through when using this guide.
  • Android Buying Guide for Modders - While modding can fix up an outdated device, it will make your life easier to buy the right device from the start.
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