Super Nintendo parts and accessories, the modder-focused upgrade and repair hub for SNES and Super Famicom builds at ZedLabz.
Browse SNES parts by type
- SNES controllers and parts, replacement pads, button kits
- SNES spare parts, cartridge slot, plastics, screws
- Capacitor kits, for full board recap projects
- All retro Nintendo consoles
- Nintendo 64 parts, successor console
The Super Nintendo launched in 1990 (Japan) / 1991 (US) and ran a decade-long victory lap as the 16-bit benchmark. Three decades on, original SNES hardware is still used heavily, and the modding scene around RGB output, region-free play and recap work is active. ZedLabz stocks replacement controllers and parts, AV cables, cartridge slot replacements, capacitor kits and the routine console plastics.
Quick picks for any SNES build
- If it's your first SNES upgrade: a fresh third-party controller. Original Nintendo pads are getting brittle; a new pad is the simplest single change with the biggest play impact.
- The everyday build: fresh controllers plus an RGB SCART or HD AV cable, much sharper picture than the standard composite lead, especially on modern displays via a scaler.
- The dream rig: recapped board, fresh cartridge slot, RGB cable and a couple of OEM-spec controllers, the long-term preservation setup.
The SNES preservation ladder
- Clean the cartridge slot: most "won't read carts" complaints are slot contamination, not slot failure. Isopropyl alcohol on a folded card edge is the modder community starting move.
- Refresh controllers: fresh button pads or a complete replacement controller. Browse SNES controllers.
- Upgrade the AV cable: RGB SCART (PAL/Euro) or component-style cables produce a much sharper image than composite. Pair with an upscaler for modern displays.
- Recap the motherboard: for consoles showing audio whine or display artefacts. Surface-mount work; an evening's project for first-timers with a fine-tip iron. See capacitor kits.
- Replace the cartridge slot: for stubborn read failures after cleaning. Through-hole slot, removable with a temperature-controlled iron and solder wick.
Tracked worldwide delivery on every order.
Related collections
SNES. FAQs
Why won't my SNES read cartridges?
Most often, slot contamination, the cartridge edge connector accumulates oxide and dust, and the slot pins lose contact. Cleaning the slot with isopropyl alcohol and a folded card edge typically resolves it. If the slot is physically damaged or pins are bent, a replacement cartridge slot is the next step.
Is RGB worth it on an SNES?
For most modders, yes. The SNES outputs RGB natively, and an RGB SCART cable produces a noticeably sharper image than composite or even S-Video. On a CRT or via an upscaler to a modern display, RGB is widely considered the best stock-hardware picture you can get. US modders typically need a SCART-to-component or upscaler chain since US sets didn't ship with SCART.
Are SNES Mini controllers compatible with the original SNES?
SNES Classic Mini controllers use the Wii Remote / Nunchuck connector, not the original SNES port, they don't plug directly into a real SNES. For original-hardware play, use third-party SNES-port controllers. Adapters that convert Mini-controller plugs to SNES exist in the wider scene but aren't part of this catalog.
Why do some SNES consoles develop yellow plastic?
UV exposure causes the brominated flame retardants in older ABS plastic to oxidise, this is the well-documented "retrobright" issue. The yellowing is reversible with hydrogen peroxide treatment, though that's a separate restoration project. A new replacement shell is the simpler fix where shells are stocked.













































