Star Tech Journal

Issue: 1996-April - Vol 18 Issue 2

STAR*TEcH
CD
April 1996
Journal
ACME'96
16YEARS OF
EXPO NOTES,
STAR*TECH ON
CD-ROM
REPoRTs
a RuMoRS ...
''I was not overly impressed with
what I saw at A CME. I didn't see
anything I had to buy. What I liked
was in the $75,000 to $20,000
range." This was the opinion of
many who attended the recent
Spring trade show.
Reports are that attendance was
low (no official figure available),
and more talk was centered
around mergers, buyouts and
fold-ups of amusement manufac-
turers than new product offer-
ings.
Aside from the thin attendance
at the show, seminars were
sparsely attended as well. One
US pinball manufacturer was
told to expect "more than 75 at-
tendees" at their service seminar
-less than a third of that figure
showed up.
One operator had the pinball of-
ferings summed up this way, ''As
far as pins go, Attack from Mars is
0 K, but nothing spectacular. I
liked Safecracker the best, but I'm
a serious player that likes to be
challenged. The general public
might not like it at all."
Hantarex is out of the coin-op
business. The Italian video moni-
tor manufacturer has sold it's re-
maining stock locally and has
exited the industry.
Taito announced it's out of the
coin-operated games biz, as well.
They have lopped off all foreign
subsidiaries -winding down their
once flourishing overseas opera-
tions.
Technos is officially out of busi-
ness. They recently closed their
Japanese facility.
Williams will acquire Atari
Games Corp. from Time Warner.
With this acquisition, Williams
will have cornered most of the
great trademark names from the
heyday of the coin-op trade of the
'80's. Area 57 from Atari was one
of the show's video standouts.
Wico was not at the show. Ru-
mor is they went bankrupt.
ICE (Innovative Concepts in
Entertainment) acquired Doyle
International, the redemption
and sports game manufacturer
from Idaho.
This all sounds like a busy day at
a high profile Wall Street firm.
The action is heavy and the scen-
ery is changing rapidly for coin-
op. Get a scorecard, so you'll
know the players!
The industry eats its' own and the
strong survive as coin-op enter-
tainment readies for the 21st Cen-
tury!
DESCRIPTION OF PROGRAM
All previous editions of STAR* TECH
Jouma~ Volumes 1 - 16 (March 1979 -
February 1995) have been scanned onto
a single CD-ROM disc with a custom
Multi-Media Microsoft Windows Program
which places thousands of articles at the
fingertips of coin-op game technicians.
POINT AND CLICK MENUS
Select from a list of manufacturers:
Then select the game or topic you want
to view. From there, just point and click
and the issue which contains your
choice will be displayed. Either scroll
through the pages or go directly to the
article of interest.
REQUIREMENTS
All that's needed is an JBM compatible
computer (386 or better) with Windows
3.1 (or later} and a CD-ROM player. All
the technical information published in
STJ during the past sixteen years will
be yours in seconds.
PRICE
$388. US funds. COD ok in USA. Price
includes shipping US and Canada.
Other countries add $9 via air.
NOTE
Only 100 ST Jon CD-ROM discs were
made by STAR* TECH Journal. The
next run will be in March of 1997 and
will be available first to purchasers of
the initial disc (at half price). Once you
are a registered user of ST J on CD-
ROM you will be offered future CD-
ROM releases at 50% off.
MolNFO
For more information or to order call,
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quests to Star Tech Journal. Inc. PO
Box 35, Medford, NJ 08055. Phone:
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Email: startech@cyberenet.net
STAR*TECH
Journal
April 1996
CD
Enzo's
Tech
Tips
"Hey Enzo, I can't find the self-test button on this Captain Fantastic!"
Douglas 'Enzo' Mccallum • Shiawassee Technical Services • Lansing, Ml
THE TOOLBOX
(PART
2)
When I'm off to Seattle or Boston to rep a product, the last thing I want is to find out I don't
have all the tools I need for the Job at hand. Tools are Just as important on a local service
call. I think an organized toolbox and the proper selection of tools is the key to good service.
Dikes/Crimpers - Use your big
dikes for the hard stuff. Flush
cutters with nicks and divots in
the cutting edges are not much
use. Crimpers are like pliers and
they often have useful extra fea-
tures like screw cutters (threaded
to protect the threads on the cut
screw) and wire strippers in-
cluded. I carry a crimper for fork
lugs and push on connectors (for
connections to joysticks and but-
tons). I also carry a different
crimper for ...
Molex pins and similar. This I use
in wiring monitor connections,
ticket dispensers, game harness
connectors and anywhere Molex
and AMP connectors are found.
Nothing can take the place of
coax and telephone RJ crimpers,
but they have limited usefulness
in our field repairs.
Drill motor and bits - I got along
without it for a long time, but I
sure don't know how. A small kit
of drill bits up to 1/4" covers most
needs, but I also carry a 5/16 and
a 3/8. A battery operated drill
motor will fit in larger kits. The 6
or 7 volt models are sufficient for
most field service. The big 9 or
12 volt models are great for con-
struction and building projects,
what I use it for is a screwdriver.
I keep a =#=2 Phillips bit chucked
in my drill for assembly and dis-
assembly work. Xcelite makes a
99 blade socket on a short shaft
for chucking into a drill motor.
This lets you use any of the 99
series blades as a power driver.
Files - A number of files come in
"In a pinch, a
temporary tip for
the Weller and
similar guns can be
made from a
piece of 12 gauge
house wiring bent
to shape."
handy. Carry a small and a large
rat tail file for dressing out or
enlarging holes. A 6 to 10" mill
file is useful for small work like
dressing solenoid plungers that
develop a lip. I like to carry a
great big heavy file, half round,
for working on panels and other
woodwork where I need a rasp.
It is also great for dressing a ball
shooter plunger that mush-
roomed when the shooter tip tore
away.
but they are overkill for our work,
not to mention heavy and they
take up a lot of space. Mostly
Wire stripper- There are any num-
ber of stripper designs out there.
Any one is good if YOU can
make it strip the insulation off of

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