Can I get A/V from my toploading NES?
Yes, it is possible. The same modification could potentially also be applied to RF-only Famicoms. • Can I get stereo audio or separate the sound channels of the NES? Yes, this is possible. You cannot separate all the sound channels individually; however, all NES/Famicom units output the 5 channels of audio split into two channels [pins on the CPU]. The two square wave channels come out of one CPU pin, and the triangle, noise, and sample channels come out of another pin. Try searching the web for information on that. • What is the Famicom Disk System? This was a relatively short-lived device released in 1986 in Japan only. It was a disk drive unit that sat underneath the Famicom system, and connected to it via a RAM cartridge. Games came on non-standard 3-inch disks. The benefits of this system were that the disks were very cheap to sell, they utilized the extra sound hardware in the RAM unit, and that players could save their games on the disks [this was before the era of cheap battery