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Erich's Arcade
Добавлен 20 июл 2018
Wells 4900 High Voltage repair
Diagnosis and repair of a Wells 4900, including high voltage measurement
Просмотров: 96
Видео
Fluke 9010A with 6502 pod - Asteroids repair
Просмотров 5685 лет назад
This video shows the usage of the 6502 pod with the Fluke 9010A troubleshooter on an asteroids PCB.
Basic wiring and power troubleshooting on an arcade cabinet
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.6 лет назад
This is a beginner level introduction into the power wiring of an arcade cabinet, and where and how to check voltages.
Arcade Monitor Cap Kits Basics
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.6 лет назад
This video will show the basics of performing a cap (capacitor) kit on an arcade CRT monitor
Wells 7203 Monitor repair
Просмотров 4036 лет назад
This video will detail the repair of a Wells Gardner 19K7203 monitor.
Arcade Monitor Basics
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.6 лет назад
This is a beginner's guide to arcade CRT monitors. This will show what the electrical connections are and what they do.
Great video. The best I’ve seen on the subject. Thank you!
Very helpful. Thank you.
Educational video..thanks. I wish u would do one where it shows a bad bit and how to locate where the bad bit is at.
Thanks for the detailed instructioned video. Question: Can I use a polarized capacitor on an area where there was a nonpolarised cap before? If so, does it matter which side the negative is on, or I can soider either way. Thanks.
Strange I’ve never seen a neck socket fail like that…. Good catch and great vid
Hey hope to see more videos. Great work
This is a very helpful video! I really like that you went through the anatomy of the monitor so thoroughly with great camera work.
Hope you find time for more vids. I know what it's like to have life interrupt your RUclips uploads.
😂
Thought you are dead
Eric. Welcome back ❤
Very helpful thank u. Any new videos coming ? It’s been 3 years is everything okay ?👍
excellent video, thank you!
I need help what’s your email 😅😅
New to the channel. Great channel! Getting ready to purchase a Phoenix arcade game. All Original. The seller is asking me if i want to have him install a cap kit in the original monitor or have him replace with a new modern monitor. What are your thoughts ?? I am new in this hobby and need some guidance. Thank you so much !
Very helpful! Trying to research and get my outrun monitor not so darn dim
Thank you for making such an in depth video
Painful to watch
Thanks so much for this, I'm getting ready to recap my first monitor (an outrun arcade monitor) and this was very helpful.
I wanna do this on my atari cocktai
30 frames a second
Isolation Transformer, it really necessary, to connect an arcade card cosolized to a tv??
Really only necessary for most (not all) arcade monitors that require it. Some (like a Wells Gardner K7400) have their own isolation transformer built in (a small one), but it's generally thought to be a good idea to use a larger separate one, IF you have an arcade monitor. Monitors like a WG K7000 will die if you don't connect them to an ISO, and they usually have a sticker on the monitor chassis power supply connecting wires to warn you one is REQUIRED. If you're using a regular unmodified TV, you really don't need one. Some people wire one large isolation transformer to the AC wiring coming in to then power EVERYTHING. Most arcade enthusiasts frown upon this, and they suggest just powering the monitor ONLY off the ISO. The incoming AC would then wire straight to the marquee light and the switching power supply to run an arcade PCB without first going through the ISO. An added benefit of doing it this way is you will reduce the amount of current the ISO has to be rated for, since it is ONLY powering your monitor, and not other parts of your cabinet. A lot of factory cabinets have a 3 AMP fuse for the entire cab. The monitors have an average 1.5-3 AMP fuse (think my K7000 for instance has a 2 AMP). So if you only have an ISO rated for, say, 2.5 AMP, you probably wouldn't want to power the PCB, marquee light, AND monitor all through the ISO. It may overheat.
I hope you make more videos I love to learn this stuff
This video really helped me a lot! Thank you!
This troubleshooting beginner's tutorial is SO under-rated. Really a nice job here, pal !!
Did you ever make the video on repairing the inoperable board?
This was a super informative video. Thank you sharing this!
Really helpful, thank you.
I think I am ready for recapping my Simpsons monitor, thank you for the great video!
The audio is not functioning correctly for me. Is it just in my end?
I can't hear it well either and I have it cranked.
Which logic analyzer do you use?
ERICHS ARCADE When reading the game codes contents from an arcade games ROM chip, what assembler can I use to convert the game code into reading the code easier? Can I load the game codes contents into an assembler and the assembler can convert the game code into reading the code easier and maybe debugging troubleshooting the code?
Hi Erich, I just got a 9010a with couple pods and starting to use it. Manual says to always power up fluke, therefore pod as well, before powering on game board so that the input protection circuits on the fluke are active. You powered up the game board first?
Eric what can I say Good explanation Too bad you no longer have subscribers But they sure lose
Eric? Where are you ? We waiting yours video
What temperature should I set my soldering iron to? Celsius or Fahrenheit?
Nice
Great video
Dont understand until now what is signature
Good video Just the camera so far
Awesome video, I hope you make more of these!!
Really good video that touches on a lot of monitor topics and you use correct terminology (as best as I could tell) consistently. You used the term "ringing" and I smiled. Rarely hear anyone say that or know what it means! Gotta love that Fluke 123B. Unless that fell off a truck, it didn't come cheap. :) I've bought 10 games for the price of that meter.
Excellent video. I'm only learning, and your videos have been very helpful. I hope you keep them coming.
The Fluke 9010A has BCD and DCD errors, they both can be stuck data bit, stuck data buss line, stuck address line. When have you got BCD and DCD errors and How can you tell what the BCD and DCD errors are coming from to narrow down the failure?
The Fluke 9010A only read 8 bits of data and the checksum is 16bits of data. Any reasons why the checksum is 16bit and not 8 bit or 32 bit? The Checksum is the "total number of bits" that the single ROM chip is holding. Can you explain more about why the checksum for each ROM chip is way less of the value compared to the total size of the ROM chip. There is a lot of empty address space left on the ROM chip if you calculate the Checksum for that ROM chip. Also the ROM chips address ranges from the memory map the starting address and ending address RANGE is way less to the actual ROM chip size. What is left on the ROM chip its just a big empty space left unused. The Test mode program on ROM chip#1 for every arcade game can't get tested using the Fluke 9010A? When you put the arcade game in test mode how can you test using the fluke 9010A to test the test mode program loading on the ROM chip? the memory mapping doesn't tell you the address range for the test program.
Nice video, I have the exact same monitor and I have to do the same swap, video sound didn't work on my phone but did on my desktop
working on a few 7203s now, helpful
Thanks, I like the large format schematics
What amp is your fuse? where do I get the parts to build one for my arcade machine?
The sound is messed up cannot hear it. Can you send me the video