Star Tech Journal

Issue: 1986-December - Vol 8 Issue 10

Qacember 1986
STAR*TEC~ J9urnal
Various and Sundry Problems
Concerning Electronics
By Sam Cross
Godwin Distributing Co.
North Little Rock, Arkansas
SI'AR"'TOCH JOURNAL has asked Sam Cross to
reply to an assortnent of service problems
most often encountered in everyday
maintenance of coin-operated electronic
entertainnent equipnent. what follows is
the first in an ongoing series of
discussions identifying the nost cornmon
trouble areas as seen by the service
corrmunity of our Industry.
\U1l7lGE MEASOREJmUS
It all depends on how you look at it,
whether you think the power supply is
sirrply one part of the game, or an
integral section concerned with providing
a well-regulated voltage and current to
the logic board.
If you think of it in the former manner,
you p:>ssibly set the voltage of a
switching p:>wer supply at the supply's
output terminals; if you are of the latter
frame of thought, however, you neasure the
voltage of the supply on the board the
supply is p:>wering -knowing that the board
is the only place to neasure correct power
supply voltage.
even better place to measure and set
the p:>wer supply voltage is on the chip
which is the furthest away from the logic
board connector -on the logic board.
An
?-t>st all of the switching supplies I have
encountered have a voltage adjust on the
supply accessible from the outside by a
p:>eket screwdriver, (some of the supplies
have p:>tentioneters which are flimsily
nounted -so don't use much pressure down
on the p:>t, only enough to get a grip in
the grooves and turn it).
'lllese supplies should only be adjusted
with the power on. This requires some
agility; holding the voltneter probes in
one hand, while a screwdriver is in the
other hand -with the added task of looking
at the meter, but it is the correct way to
adjust the supply.
(12)
ICFOiml.Em
.A
Don't know where the p:>wer supply

terminals on a chip are located?
.
Here is a quick lesson. The ground side of
a chip on alnost all 'ITL (74xx type
chips), and irost all Eproms (the meirory
chips), is the last leg on the first side.
The p:>wer (+SVOC) input is on the last leg
of the last side.
Let's look at this through some simple
drawings. Chips don't install in_either
direction, so how do you know which leg is
pin one?
Well, the manufacturers in their
competitive nature have made things hard
on us. One thing is certain though, don't
go by the identification writing on the
chip!
Most all manufacturers use the notch to
indicate the "top" of the chip, some use
the dot at pin one, and still fewer use
the dot on the other side (Fairchild).
FIRSTtEltB
F1RsrS1DI
1
~OTCH
z
"
't\~T"
Just remember that you count legs on a
chip in the sane way you would write the
letter "U"; in the counterclockwise
direction.
last leg First side= ground.
Last leg Last side = power.
CAUTION! Some 'ITL ships, few in fact, have
their p:>wer supply legs on pins other than
the standard above (such exarrples are:
7441, 7473, 7476, 7477, 7478, 7481, 7482,
7483, 7493), so an Eprom chip is your best
bet as a measuring point.
If you don't have an Eprom chip near where
you want to measure, use the legs of a
noise filter capacitor on the board. There
are usually a lot of these on the board,
commonly found near the edges of the board
-straddling the ground and power busses. -
NEXT ISSUE: Installing Line Filters and
MOVs when performing garne conversions.
Also tie-downs for logic systems utilizing
"piggy-back" mini-boards.
STAR*TECH Journal
December 1986
This supply has two more sections that are
not used on every supply. SCR, Rl7, Rl8,
and Dl2 make up an overvoltage Crowbar
circuit. If the output voltage rises above
5 volts, Dl2 starts to breakdown. The
current through Rl8 causes a voltage drop
across it. This voltage is applied to the
gate of the SCR through Rl7. When the
potential exceeds the trigger voltage, the
SCR conducts, shorts the voltage to
ground, and hopefully saves the boards.
Power Supplies: Theory Of Operation
Jajy
W
Janes Beck
Greater Southern Distributing Co.
Atlanta, Georgia
Over the past few rronths I've been
atterrpting to show you how to modify power
supplies to get better performance or to
obtain voltages that they didn't normally
have. This leaves one problem. What do you
do when the supply breaks down? Needless
to say proper logic board operation
requires proper power supply operation.
'!he last thing to look at is Rll and Dll.
Rll is a current limiting resistor for the
LED Dll. This is used to visually check
that there is an output. It doesn't rrean
the output is correct, just that there is
sorrething there.
Figure 1 shows a basic +5 volt regulator
taken from a Mylstar MA.CH III nanual.
+ 11, 5V
DC
Q11
2N58'79
H.S. 31
+5V DC
+
R13
12
2W

(13)
-
-
012
1N4734
5V
SCR
MCR 68-1
C12
C13
100UFI 0.1UFl
16V _l 50V_L
-=- C14
0.22UF
35V
TANT.
U11 K
TL431 &-:.:..R ----e----+----r----.
T0-92 A
-=-
-=-
I +
f66
110,1
1/4W
MV5752
-=-
Next rronth we'll "power up" our supply and
look at each section in operation. '!hat
way we can see how the failure of a
specific section will affect the overall
operation.
Let's break it down and look at the
separate sections.
First is the reference voltage section.
This is the actual regulator of the whole
system. It supplies the "rock steady"
voltage that determines the output
voltage. It is made up of Ull (an
adjustable Zener), Rl2, R15, R16, and VRl
(the +5 adjust).
(Ull functions just like a fixed Zener,
but by varying the voltage on the R
terminal, you change the breakdown
voltage.) This section gives us a nicely
regulated voltage, but the current it
supplies is very small compared to what
the boards need.
That takes us to the next section. Qll and
Ql2 make up the current arrplifier. 'Ibey
&ake the low level current supplied by the
• eference section and bring it up to a
useable level. Qll is the transistor
referred to as the Series-Pass since, as
you can see, it is in series with the
unregulated voltage and the load.
R11
180
1/4W
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