Road Runner Arcade PCB repair - Atari System 1

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  • čas přidán 4. 01. 2018
  • Another arcade PCB repair of a primarily non working board. After replacement of an obviously missing part and an ic socket replacement and some reflow work the board is working again! This video has some similarities with the Indiana Jones PCB repair I did earlier and really emphasises and is well representative for common problems with Atari System 1 cartridge PCBs.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 20

  • @splugereport
    @splugereport Před 11 měsíci +1

    These videos are wonderful, thanks!

  • @kieljohnson6507
    @kieljohnson6507 Před 6 lety +4

    Before I even watch your video I would just like to say welcome back doctor and I hope you had good holidays. Big thumbs up from a big fan all the way from england.

    • @kieljohnson6507
      @kieljohnson6507 Před 6 lety +1

      Great simple repair. But full of knowledge and simple pointers. thumbs up and keep the vids coming doctor

    • @christophzett
      @christophzett  Před 6 lety

      I noticed you pressed the "thumb up" even before watching the vid... :-) So thank you the confidence you placed in me! ;-)

  • @wakabzh8858
    @wakabzh8858 Před 6 lety +1

    A real good job dude. I had some card to repair and i will take a look of all your video. It ll help me for sure. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @davesclassics
    @davesclassics Před 6 lety +2

    Great start to 2018 with another excellent repair video from doktorzett! I find these vids fascinating. Wouldn't have thought to look at the chip socket itself TBH.. gotta keep an open mind. Thankyou!

    • @christophzett
      @christophzett  Před 6 lety

      You are welcome! Thank you for your nice comment and happy new year for you! :-)

  • @nicolaslacoste9367
    @nicolaslacoste9367 Před 6 lety

    Thanks a lot for this new repair video. I wish you an happy new year

  • @twobob
    @twobob Před 2 lety

    Zooooooooooom..... That was a fast one

  • @bitsaversru
    @bitsaversru Před 6 lety

    You can also use MAME source code to match address ranges to ROM IDs -- Road Runner ROM definitions start on line 1503 in src/mame/drivers/atarisy1.cpp for example.

  • @jorgehrenstein4031
    @jorgehrenstein4031 Před 6 lety

    great video, with good explanations.
    Just one question: is it possible to convert system1 pcbs?
    p.e. roadrunner to India Jones?

    • @christophzett
      @christophzett  Před 6 lety

      Very good question! I actually wanted to try to convert a spare road blasters cartridge once to something else but unfortunately it is not that easy because of a certain custom chip that can be found on every system 1 cartridge board. Look for a small, socketed 20-pin DIP on the board next to the program roms. The number on the chip will be 137412-1xx. The so called "slapstic" was a security chip made by Atari, which was used for bank switching and security in several coin-operated video games from 1984 through 1990. They were designed to prevent operators from burning new EPROMs and "upgrading" their PCBs to a new game without buying the necessary kits from Atari. For example, the five System 1 games each used a different slapstic, so that you couldn't take, say, a Marble Madness machine, burn new EPROMs, and convert it into an Indiana Jones.That said, however, there are slapstics that appear to be functionally identical, despite the fact that they have different part numbers: 137412-103 (Marble Madness) appears to be functionally identical to 137412-110 (Road Blasters & APB). But I do not know if anyone ever managed to make a conversion between the two.

    • @jorgehrenstein4031
      @jorgehrenstein4031 Před 6 lety

      doktorzett, I know about the Slapstiks, I have seen them reproduced. But never found a thread about conversions (with documentation).
      Has the Indiana Jones PCB the same layout (like Roadrunner)?

    • @christophzett
      @christophzett  Před 6 lety

      It seems to be slightly different. Road Runner and Road Blasters on the other hand look pretty much the same. Check here: forums.arcade-museum.com/showthread.php?t=395015

  • @bradyhearn3896
    @bradyhearn3896 Před 5 lety

    Did you make that System 1 power tester yourself?

    • @christophzett
      @christophzett  Před 5 lety

      You mean the adapter cable that hooks up the system 1 to the switching psu? Yes, did that myself - pinouts are available in the system 1 documentation and the "standard arcade voltages" are sufficient.

    • @bradyhearn3896
      @bradyhearn3896 Před 5 lety

      Cool! I'll have to try that myself. Just need the right molex...

    • @christophzett
      @christophzett  Před 5 lety +1

      Yep. If I remember it right I used black for ground, red for +5V, yellow for +12V and white for -5v. And I think the system 1 actually wants -12V according to the manual but it worked fine with the usual -5V that you find on standart arcade switchers.