Star Tech Journal

Issue: 1983-March - Vol 5 Issue 1

STAR*TECH JOURNAL/MARCH 1983
19
Gottlieb's MA-400 Filter Board
Commencing with "Q•Bert", GV-103A, a Filter Board (AB) was designed to suppress radio
frequency emission which can cause electromagnetic interference.
The method utilized by Gottlieb (ferrite beads coupled with bypass capacitors), form low pass
filters. The ferrite beads surrounding the transmission lines are electrically nonconductive and
"absorb" magnetic flux. The higher the frequency, the higher the impedance (typically 100 ohms
above 30 MHz). The larger beads are utilized on lines carrying larger currents, such as power supply
lines and ground; the smaller beads suppress all other transmission lines. The output side of the beads,
related to the logic board, are coupled to ceramic high frequency capacitors that suppress high
frequency spikes to ground. Ceramic substrate capacitors were found to have the most desirable
effect.
Only the wires (signals/voltages) that penetrate the metallic shield surrounding the master
electronic board utilize the Filter Board. The large foil area on the Filter Board is a ground plane
which allows as small an impedance as possible.
Illustrated is a schematic representation of the resistive/inductive properties of the beads. Note:
Input to the Filter Board is any wire coming from the master electronic board.
Input _..,_~ '"'•'vVH-
''·\✓) r►
Part of Filter Board
(typical)
INTRODUCING
ENCORE RETRO·KIT .
from this:
Output
I
Troubleshooting Gottlieb's "Q*Bert" GG-111 System
The GG-111 logic board employs several jumpers that give the operator some troubleshooting leeway.
The two jumper posts are shorted together by a blue plastic-coated jumper terminal. These can be
removed by pulling upwards on the terminal.
Jumpers JP21 and JP22 are jumper options for the video summer. The video summer is the
arbitrator to set priority for either background or foreground. This determines whether the foreground
character will appear in front of or behind the background character. JP2 l has the blue terminal on it,
JP22 is bare. If there is a question as to whether a problem exists in the foreground or the background,
remove JP2 l. This will eliminate all foreground characters from the screen. By placing the terminal
onto JP22, all of the background characters disappear from the CRT. This will aid the operator in
determining what area of the logic board to concentrate his efforts on, either the background logic or
the foreground logic.
There are several groups of LSI on the GG-111 logic board that deserve some mention. J 1 through
16 are the Line Object Select RAMs. These should be suspected if either the wrong character appears
on the screen or if extra characters appear (i.e., a floating disk above Coily or all of the foreground
objects being identical characters). H 1 through H4 are the Vertical Position RAMs. If defective, these
can attribute to erratic movement of the characters and cause them to be positioned incorrectly on the
CRT. E 1-2, the Foreground Horizontal Position Register, will produce all characters at the bottom of
the CRT when faulty while E4, the Foreground Vertical Position Register, will move all the
characters to one side of the screen. E2-3, the Fore ground Object Select Register, can give rise to the
absence of several or all of the foreground characters.
to this:
Reprinted courtesy of Golllieb's technical newsletter, "On Target"
***
MOVING? QUESTIONS?
The address label on your envelope contains your subscriber account
number in the top left corner and the month and year your subscription
will expire appears at the far right.
If you have any questions regarding your subscription/account or wish
to change your address, we can more readily expedite the matter by
knowing your account number. (Computers, you know.)
Should you change your address, please send us your most recent
label, or a photocopy of it, and we'll update your account.
Place label from envelope here
or notify us of your account number
and old address.
Indicate your NEW ADDRESS below.
in less than 1 hour
Change any Galaxian'" or Pac-Man'" to Beezer'".
build a new look and new collections ..
The Do-It-Yourself Kit can be used to convert
other games to Beezer'" too.
INTRODUCTORY OFFER
Beezer'" Encore Retro-Kit'" .
. $745.00
ea.
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BE EZER~ PC Board, Graphic Overlay for Marquee, View·
ing Window.and Control Panel, 2 20" Circular Side
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contact:
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Your name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Company _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Address
City/State/Zip
4984 El Camino Real, Suite 217
Los Altos, CA 94022
(415) 964-0943
(800) 872· 7200
TM - Encore Retro-Kit of Intrepid Mktg
TM - Beezer of Tong Elec.
TM• Galaxian, Pac-Man of Midway Mfg.
20
STAR*TECH JOURNAL/MARCH 1983
hear.
r s
The names of various video games comprise
this issue's word puzzle. Find and encircle
these words that appear below. They run
vertically, horizontally, diagonally and
sometimes backwards.
VIDEO GAMES
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Find these hidden words in the above puzzle:
JOUST
BURGERTIME
PACMAN
QBERT
MILLIPEDE
ZAXXON
PENGO
GALAGA
POPEYE
XEVIOUS
Here is the answer key
to February's puzzle:
PINBALL PLAYFIELD PARTS
B

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By Mark "Bear'' Attebery, Vending International Corp., San Juan Capistrano, CA
Hello there techs and future techs. The reason I say that is, I've had numerous calls from persons
working as gameroom personnel, doing game repair and board swapping that read Star*Tech
Journal and have asked that I go into more detail on digital logic and how it works. For those
people I will start expounding on basic digital building-block logic. For the more advanced
technicians, I will be finding and bringing basic building-block circuits each month also. But let's
start off with the first future techs lesson.
There are two states in digital logic: "on" and "off'', which is also known as "high" and "low",
or " l " and "0". I will use "l" and "0" as it is easier to write and sometimes I get lazy.
OK, a digital signal can be a solid I, a solid 0, or a pulse sequence that looks like this:
C
M
?4 i~~
D C, E
lJ j~•: C
·' A ::<
C .::::. z
~
C '3
p
;:1
* DIGITAL LOGIC INTRO* 555 TIMER CIRCUITS
* KASCO " DRIVER II" * TICKET DISPENSER FEEDBACK
Now when you have a signal that looks like this on an "0-scope", you should line up the lower side
of the pulse on the reference line of the "0-scope" and measure the voltage from there ...
-------·r-7-------- +10v
___ __j
l _ _ _____ Ov
. .. like that for instance. This is a square wave. Using a logic probe, your high, low, or pulse LED
indicator will light up, but we are going to stick with explaining the logic using oscilloscope
illustrations so that you can see the wave shapes. You also can put a signal other than a square
wave into IC chips and get a different predictable wave form out ( depending on the logic chip). For
you persons who have heard the abbreviations TTL, DTL, MOS, CMOS; these things mean
(respectively) "Transistor Transistor Logic", "Diode Transistor Logic", "Metal Oxide Silicon
( or semi-conductor)", and "Complimentary Metal Oxide Silicon ( or semi-conductor)".
Since a wave form shape can be changed by using a transistor, diode, or capacitor, then the
same changes can be accomplished using IC chips. (Keep this in mind when trying to figure out
why that sound board went out!) What I want you to do if you are really interested in learning how
digital logic works is this: Go down to your local Radio Shack or electronic supply house and
purchase a "proto board" ( your cost will run six to twelve dollars), a cheap + 12-volt power supply
( or if you prefer using TTL I Cs instead of CMOS, a +5-volt power supply) or make one using one
of the schematics (see Figures 1-A and 1-B on page 21).
.. . and the following IC chips: CMOS 4001, 4011, 4069, 4071, 4081, or TTL 7400, 7402,
7404, 7408, 7432. (Remember that if you choose TTL that you can only use a +5-volt power
supply.) You will also need some LEDs, and IC bread board, some 24-gauge solid wire, and that
will be enough. Since this column cannot consume the entire Star* Tech Journal, we will continue
this later.
Now on to a super linear IC that has a million uses. The NE555 timer chip. This chip can be
used to produce a clock pulse, cause frequency tone bursts, and many other functions. Let's disect
this bug. Pin# I is GND, #2 is trigger, #3 is output, #4 is reset, #5 is your control voltage, #6 is
your threshold pin, #7 is the discharge pin, and #8 is VDD. The NE555 IC was the first IC timer
chip and is probably the most widely used, and is extremely easy to use! First, remember your
formula for finding an RC time constant ... for you who have not done this . .. an RC time constant
stands for Resistor/Capacitor time constant and the formula is: (Time= T) T = 1.1 (RI .Cl) So
let's say you want a one second pulse.That means that your resistor value (IM) must negate your
capacitance value to = 1.1 second.
C
= .!.
R
I sec
.
-1 -
= lu or l nucro
meg
So your RC circuit should include I megil resistor and a l mf capacitor.
1.1 = 1.1 second. ((1 x 106) x (1 x 10-6)] = 1.1 second.
Now that you have that down, let's move on ... let's build a one-shot timer.

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