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Silence Your Sega Dreamcast's Old Grinding GD-ROM Drive with a Fancy New Brass Gear

Right you lot, it’s time to get your five-quid soldering iron out, dust off that 30-year-old tin of flux, and bodge a good old-fashioned down-and-dirty modification to your Dreamcast. I’m not talking about the mainstream mods for the casuals out there like the Noctua fan, PicoPSU, or GDEMU. No, I’m talking about something you truly may not have heard of before. Something more nuanced. Something for the purist Dreamcast owners among you.

Errrrr, eeuurrrrrr, euurrreeerrrrrr… that glorious operatic groaning you hear when your GD-ROM drive is trying to load the inside of Ryo Hazuki’s gaff or desperately rendering the next corridor in Soldier of Fortune. It’s a wonderful sound. Deep. Rich. Textured. Central to the nostalgia of that white dreamy box.

However, I’ve recently discovered you can swap one of the plastic gears in the disc-drive mechanism for a fancy new one made of brass — British balls-of-brass. And the result is honestly astounding. That rattly, grumbling rumble transforms into a sleek, nimble, almost printer-esque hum.

I stumbled across this gem in an old Reddit post by user PacmaniaX_01, who detailed how they’d searched high and low to find the perfect replacement brass gear. The part you need is a ‘14-tooth brass pinion, 1.48 mm’ and you can grab a pack of five down your local AliExpress for three quid fifty including postage. So I ordered some from the Far East and patiently waited 13 weeks for delivery.

All you need is a fresh pack of nice British brass balls (gears)

I’ve written a step-by-step guide below but in essence you need to remove the motor from the disc drive, take off the old plastic gear, heat up the new brass gear, place the motor shaft in the hole on the gear and give it a few firm hits with a small hammer to get the gear on the motor shaft. Then, pop it back in and presto! It is so quiet and sexy sounding, it’s like a brand new console.

Phwoaarrrrrr!

Bear in mind that getting the gear onto the motor is quite tricky. If you’re not so handy, some total legend on eBay is selling the replacement motors with the brass gear already fitted making this mod plug and play (sort of).

One thing to note as well is when I first booted the console up after applying the mod, for a second I thought the console was broken. The fan starts to whir, the disc spins up, but there was no horrid disc drive grinding noises?! My brain didn't quite know how to compute this... It was like one third of a symphonic orchestra called in sick and the remaining two thirds were left to play. It was unsettling. The Dreamcast suddenly feels… modern? Mature? Dare I say… polite?

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. Remove the top shell of the console
  2. Push the laser module all the way back on the rails (makes the following steps easier)
  3. Unclip the wires from the black clips on the side of the drive
  4. Lift the top GD-ROM drive out and flip it over (I use the top of the Dreamcast’s shell as a stand as it's the perfect height)
  5. Unscrew the motor (one single screw)
  6. Desolder the motor wires and remove the motor (make a note of which one is positive and which is negative)
  7. Slide the plastic gear off the motor shaft
  8. Heat the brass gear (I used a chef’s blowtorch, a lighter should work too) while holding it with tweezers
  9. Place the hot gear on a hard surface, align the motor shaft, and give it a few firm, controlled taps with a small hammer
  10. LEAVE THE BRASS GEAR A FEW MINUTES TO COOL. Do not re-install gear when it's hot as it will melt the adjacent plastic gears - big sad if this happens! F*CK, THAT’S HOT! Don’t touch it either.
  11. Re-solder the motor wires and screw the motor back in
  12. Optional: apply a light layer of silicone grease to all the gears
  13. Reassemble the drive and console.

What You Gain

  • Reduced motor strain
  • Slightly quicker seek times (No, it can't run Crysis)
  • Almost no mechanical chatter
  • Lower chance of disc-read errors
  • A GD-ROM drive that feels 20 years younger

As a bonus, my Dreamcast had never reliably booted my PAL copy of Rez on the first try… until now. After this mod it boots instantly. Coincidence? Maybe. More on that here.

Final Thoughts

This mod isn’t glamorous. It won’t blow up YouTube, and it won’t get you a million likes on  TikTok. It’s a tiny hunk of metal that quietly brings the Dreamcast one step closer to modern times and keeps those old drives alive for years to come.

Just be warned: Your Dreamcast may never growl at you again... and you might actually miss it.

Bang Bang Busters 2 Kickstarter Goes Live — a Sega Dreamcast Indie Sequel!

Have you finished the last puzzle on Chew Chew Mimic and are now finding yourself hungry for your next Dreamcast fix? Well, PixelHeart might have you covered with their latest Kickstarter campaign for Bang Bang Busters 2.

As the "2" in the title might infer, this is the sequel to the 2010 Visco-developed Neo Geo title Bang Bang Busters (also stylised as Bang² Busters), a single-screen arcade title akin to the likes of Bubble Bobble and Snow Bros where you clear stages by grabbing the enemies and hurling them at other enemies to build up combos and boost your score.

Bang Bang Busters 2 sees cutesy space bunnies Lazy and Refia return to once again defeat Emperor Honey and stop his evil plan to transform the kings of the universe into giant mascots and imprison them all in a planetary amusement park called Happy Universe. 

Okay, so the plot may have been ripped straight out of a 90s quarter-munching cabinet, but if you enjoy classic action platforming, Bang Bang Busters 2 could be well worth a look.

Although the lead platforms for the project are the Neo Geo MVS and AES cartridges, PixelHeart have confirmed that the Dreamcast version is a dedicated native port for the platform, and will sport improvements over the base game including a larger colour palette and refined visuals. The audio is also going to be improved with stereo sound and a CD-quality soundtrack. This is a definite improvement over the Dreamcast release of the original Bang Bang Busters, which was effectively just an emulated ROM on a disc.

As with other PixelHeart titles, regional packaging design options are available for Dreamcast, including our favourite love-to-hate option of a PAL jewel case (priced at €50) as well as US and Japanese themed versions (priced at €35) to best fit your current collection.

You can check out the Kickstarter here, where as of writing, the project is £15,042 towards its goal of £30,845. The Kickstarter runs until the 30th of November so it's looking promising that the goal will be achieved. There are also downloadable demos available for free for both Dreamcast and Neo Geo, if you want to test out an early build to see if it's up your street. 

Have you played the original Bang Bang Busters? Are you looking forward to a sequel? Let us know in the comments or on social media.