pbp file with your own pics cause the programm may crash. bin file in the input folder and the game id and save id fields will appear automatically then choose the output folder for your.
#Psx2psp 1.4.2 base.pbp download iso#
Thanks.First, try to rip your own games.Use a tool like magic iso and convert the disc to an image file.At the end of the process you will have a file (.iso. I tried putting a keys.bin file from one of my games in there and still got the same result. It might have something to do with having a keys.bin file in the files folder of PSX2PSP (similarly to how you have to have a base.pbp file in there in order to extract isos from what i read), but I'm not sure. I looked around on the internet but there's no real information i can find. I still get an eboot.pbp file but it is corrupt.
Thanks.Īlso i can tell 2 more games work for me, Crash Bandicoot 2 This may be a stupid question, but how do I get PSX2PSP 1.4.2 to work? I keep getting an error at the end of the conversion process saying "cannot find STARTDAT in NOT A VALID PSX EBOOT.PBP". isoĪlso i can tell 2 more games work for me, Crash Bandicoot 2 This may be a stupid question, but how do I get PSX2PSP 1.4.2 to work? I keep getting an error at the end of the conversion process saying "cannot find STARTDAT in NOT A VALID PSX EBOOT.PBP". bin i think its is better for popstation than.
#Psx2psp 1.4.2 base.pbp download psp#
Thank youI have ripped my own bushido blade 2 disc using magic iso for the image and popstation v 1.4 and works fine with my psp go. I tried downloading from 3 different places and none of them work. I also couldn't get LSD Dream Emulator to work, but chalked that up to not being on a PSP Go. The results suggest that pRNA accelerates gp16 ATPase activity more significantly than genomic dsDNA, albeit both pRNA and genomic DNA are involved in the contact with gp16 during DNA packaging.Vmr wrote:Can someone please explain how you are getting Bushido Blade 2 to work? I'm using 6.20 tn-d on a PSP3000, and I get a black screen after the first Sony logo.
Interestingly, the stimulation degree by phi29 pRNA was similar to that of poly d(pyrimidine). The order of ATPase stimulation is poly d(pyrimidine) > dsDNA > poly d(purine), which agreed with the order of the DNA binding to gp16, as revealed by single molecule fluorescence microscopy. The affinity of gp16 for ATP was greatly boosted by the presence of DNA or pRNA, but the ATPase rate was strongly affected by DNA structure and chemistry. The k cat and K m in the absence of DNA was 0.016 s − 1 and 351.0 μM, respectively, suggesting that gp16 itself is a slow-ATPase with a low affinity for substrate. To investigate the mechanism of the motor action, the kinetics of the ATPase activity of gp16 was evaluated as a function of DNA structure (ss- or ds-stranded) or chemistry (purine or pyrimidine).
Similar to the assembly of other dsDNA viruses, bacterial virus phi29 uses a motor to translocate its DNA into a procapsid, with the aid of protein gp16 that binds to pRNA 5′/3′ helical region.