Konami/Stern 1982 Amidar Arcade PCB Repair

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2014
  • Another problem arcade board resurrected from the dead. As with a lot of them, a relatively simple fault, watch James badly explain the debugging process with some sarcastic comments.
    We'd like to thank our friends Muppz, Equites and Guddler from UKVaC for helping out in the on-line diagnosis and if you're interested, read the discussion thread at this link:
    www.ukvac.com/forum/amidar-res...
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Komentáře • 24

  • @walburg11
    @walburg11 Před 7 lety +3

    Stern games in general had horrible power supplies. Also the early z-80 processors marked Italy were defective. Change to a switching power supply replace the processor to Z80a And most of your problems will disappear. This guy does a great job explaining trouble shooting. Remember the only two things you can do with electricity is switch and regulate.

  • @Colin2084
    @Colin2084 Před 9 lety +2

    I might be barking, but I think the first section of the circuit is a "brown out detect" circuit (looks for a voltage drop/dip on the base via the 470 ohm resistor, and the 220uf holds an average of the supply voltage). When you get a psu brown out, this then causes the pnp transistor to conduct which then sends the voltage at 220uf (as that's not dipped you see and its a fairly big value to sustain enough power while the psu is low) , to turn the 2nd transitor on... this discharges the 10uf capacitor which is the main power on reset circuit, causing a reset if it dips long enough..
    The rest is just a normal reset circuit, which is the 10k resistor and the 10uf cap.... this starts at 0v and then charges up to 5v over time, causing 5c output to start at 1 and then go to 0.... Thats combined with what looks like a watch dog at 4d, If the power supply is dipping from time to time it will cause a just in case reset....

  • @dinkc64
    @dinkc64 Před 10 lety +1

    Excellent video, thanks for the troubleshooting info

  • @SoftwareAgentsTV
    @SoftwareAgentsTV Před 2 lety

    Great video. Very informative.

  • @KevsElectricalWorkshop
    @KevsElectricalWorkshop Před 4 lety +2

    Love this channel, been ages since i repaired a board but must get into it again......on search for cheap board LOL

  • @snap584
    @snap584 Před 10 lety +2

    nice bit of work mate im learning

  • @dazamad
    @dazamad Před 2 lety

    I know an old video but do you have any videos on setting up arcade pcb to a lcd monitor? Many thanks

  • @user-dx7ls2uw2s
    @user-dx7ls2uw2s Před 7 lety

    the component near the afr is the hard switch fo reset?
    somebody know?

  • @sludge-en9on
    @sludge-en9on Před 7 lety +1

    good video thankyou for making it

  • @GadgetUK164
    @GadgetUK164 Před 9 lety +5

    Love the channel already! Subbed! =)

    • @retrogamesparty
      @retrogamesparty  Před 9 lety +3

      Thank you, plenty more to come.

    • @mimiorbe8273
      @mimiorbe8273 Před 6 lety

      I'm not sure but ,if anyone else wants to learn about
      how to repair my computer
      try Saankramer Electronic Magazine System (just google it ) ? Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my co-worker got excellent results with it.

  • @robmcraf2765
    @robmcraf2765 Před 7 lety +1

    nice video. any reason you have your probe set to cmos?

    • @retrogamesparty
      @retrogamesparty  Před 7 lety +4

      Its such a long time back, I think because I was poking around in effectively an analog part of the circuit I could tell what was going on. This was before I learned how to use a scope properly and about proper logic hi/lo/floating. I would use a scope for this kind of repair nowadays and use trigger capture and so on or two probes at once etc.
      Ok, i'm hiding the fact that when this was done I knew very little - I don't claim to know everything now but certainly a lot more than I did back then.

  • @AnthonySDurant
    @AnthonySDurant Před 7 lety +1

    What tool are you using and what brand is it? Thanks for sharing! Cheers.

    • @lazlogurzogonas878
      @lazlogurzogonas878 Před 7 lety +2

      its a "logic probe", The tip (probe) in the guy's hand is only part of the device. It is an equipment that can be very useful for an electronic engineer or technician but that is useless for those who do not have the necessary technical conformation.

  • @computerboy9766
    @computerboy9766 Před 8 lety +1

    9:31 what is that 60Hz buzz I'm hearing?

  • @mylowproject
    @mylowproject Před 7 lety +1

    cold solder joints are a problems with these logic boards.

  • @azariayehezkel9064
    @azariayehezkel9064 Před 6 lety

    You in cmos function in the prob

  • @cozzm0AU
    @cozzm0AU Před 10 lety

    Is that an old FDD cable you're using to extend?

    • @retrogamesparty
      @retrogamesparty  Před 10 lety +1

      Yep, well spotted :) I had to order specially one that had an A and a B drive as all the other ones I had lurking around were the standard you get now with motherboards which have only 1 drive and a twist at the end. I did try to rework a newer one but couldn't get it to re-crimp properly.

  • @adeimusa5199
    @adeimusa5199 Před 4 lety +1

    good

  • @TheMadmagik
    @TheMadmagik Před 9 lety +2

    be careful with your logic probe you have it on CMOS setting.

  • @flyguille
    @flyguille Před 7 lety

    jejeje I laught when the prove slipped from pin #26 and join two pins together... and you suddenly stressed!!!!, happened me 1000 times, but z80's are inmortal.