Star Tech Journal

Issue: 1989-October - Vol 11 Issue 8

Atari Hard Driving
Jerky Steering
Electrohom.e G07
Vertical Deflection
Mark McAvy and Bruce C. White
Fun Factory
Kennesaw, Georgia
James Beck
Greater Southern Distributing Co.
Atlanta, Georgia
PROBLEM
PROBLEM
We had no shifting control. The steering was
erratic and would only work on half of the
screen, and the coin mech lights were dim.
SOLUTION
A slo-blow 3 amp fuse took care of the dim
lights and the steering then worked across
the whole screen. The shifter was not yet
working nor was the jerky motion of the
steering wheel solved. After talking to Atari
and getting voltage readings for the main
PCB, we still could find no problem.
We then noticed that a resistor on the sbifter
PCB assembly seemed burned. After check-
ing R28 and found that it was bad, we also
checked QS and found that the +5 volt
regulator was also bad. The replacement
was made and the board reinserted back
into the game. The shifter was working and
had complete control over the steering with
no jerky motion.
Concerning an Electrohome GO7 Robotron
monitor: No Vertical Deflection and FR401
(68 ohm, 2 watt fusible resistor) keeps open-
ing. Known good: Deflection yoke, R414,
R415 and C412.
SOLUTION
Check these suspected parts for failure:
X402
X401
D401
C411
(may be shorted)
(may be shorted)
(open or shorted will
cause problems)
(may be shorted)
NOTE
Make sure you're replacing FR401 with a
wire-wound replacement and NOT a carbon
type.
Electrohom.e G07 Replacem.ent Capacitor
Mike Cowen
Video Images
Scottsdale, Arizona
PROBLEM
If you are having trouble finding a replace-
.ment capacitor for the main filter C604, try
checking with your local Panasonic
(Matsushita) parts distributor.
SOLUTION
They should stock an exact replacement
part or they can order it.
AMOA Standardization CoD1D1ittee Update
Frank 'The Crank" Seninsky
Alpha-Omega Amusements & Sales
Edison, New Jersey
A committee meeting took place on Septem-
ber 10, 1989 in Las Vegas.
1. Three new standards were approved by
the committee and later approved by the
AMOA Board of Directors:
3. AAMA (Mfgs) officially formed a standardi-
zation committee to be part of the AM.QA
(operators) Standardization Committee.
4. The entire standardization committee
was divided into the following sub-commit-
tees as the last official act of the chairman:




Standardization Parts Committee
Standardization Cabinet Committee
Standardization Pinball Committee
Standardization Compliance Committee
5. Bob Fay of AAMA will make sure that each
manufacturer is malled the AMOA Stan-
dardization Checklist.
6. The Standardization Committee will pre-
pare a detailed letter to JAMMA which will be
hand delivered by AAMA's Bob Fay and Gil
Pollock. This letter will thank JAMMA for
their past contributions to standardization,
list the areas where further compliance is
necessary, and ask for continued communi-
cations between our two groups.
2. An AMOA industry approved logo was
adopted by the committee and the AMOA
Board of Directors. This logo will be copy-
right registered as soon as possible. The logo
will be used by those manufacturers whose
product meets all the applicable industry
standards. Once approved, a manufacturer
can use the logo in its advertising and/ or
have it stamped on its product.
7. The committee's goals are to have a dozen
additional standards ready to discuss at the
next meeting, increase standardization
compliance above the 50% current mark,
and put together a method of testing prod-
ucts submitted for the .. AMOA Approved
Standard" stamp.
8. The next meeting of the full AMOA Stan-
dardization Committee will take place
March 8, 1990 at the Hyatt Regency in
Chicago at 8:00 a.m.

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