Star Tech Journal

Issue: 1996-June - Vol 18 Issue 4

June 1996
CD
ROWE
ROWE
CD100F
RELEASES NEW
REDUCTION
CDM-12
GEARS
EPROM REv1s10N
Wes McCoy
McCoy Enterprises Inc.
Petaluma, CA
Rowe Service
Rowe International
Whippany, New Jersey
PROBLEM
MACHINES AFFECTED
CDlO0F - title pages jamming
All Rowe jukeboxes equipped
with a CD M-12 player version
AH00, AH0l or AH02.
CAUSE
This is the first ROWE to have
title pages flipping on one hori-
zontal axis rather than two verti-
cal axis on previous models.
'
STAR*TEcH
The pages would occasionally
turn but more often than not
would jam and not go any far-
ther.
Journal
C11EA1'
WESTEJ'iN
TJ1AD1ND PDST
480 Shelley Street Suite E
Springfield, OR 97477
(503) 726-1813
FAX (503) 726-7413
Internet address gwinc@efn.org
Its Time to
Clean out Your
Warehouse
we
Buy, Sell, or Trade for
oti: uazi:
Vll:!0 CAM!
ClllCUIT
SOAnl:at
PROBLEM
Rowe has updated its mech con-
trol software in conjunction with
Phillips to improve playability on
marginal discs.
SOLlITION
Replace all earlier version
Eproms with version 5.3.
CAUSE
Please call or Fax yo ur list
us. We ca n use all most
any game p. c.b . fr om
Space In vaders o n!!
to
*****
A survey of the unit showed one
of the two white reduction gears
on the unit was stripped.
ID
PROCEDURE
To determine if your player has
version 5.1 or 5.2 Eprom, per-
form the following procedure:
CAurION
Replacing the gear does not re-
quire much disassembly but plac-
ing the title page carriage in the
correct position can be tricky.
The part number is 22101501
(gear-reduction/ drive)
1. Enter service mode
2. Type 88
3. Hold reset, press 3 twice
We will pay Shipping!
*****
You can trade your old
boards for new boards!
......
VVhat wjJI ,¥QM-,QO with all
that CAM?!!!!! !!!
AVAILABILITY
NOTE
-
Rowe technicians are aware of
the problem and should have
released a service bulletin regard-
ing this problem.Check with
your Rowe distributor for more
information.
-
If your player does not have 5.3
Eprom, this chip can be ordered
from your Rowe distributor.
*
.
*
*
By the way .... we
sell the NEWest
BOARDS and
KITS also!!!!
*
. . . . . . . . .. ... . . . ... .. . . .. .. .. ...
'
. . . . .. .
STAR*TECH
Journal
Enzo
June 1996
CD
1
s
Tech
Tips e
"Hey Enzo, I can't find the self-test button on this Captain Fantastic!,,
Douglas 'Enzo' Mccallum • Shiawassee Technical Services • Lansing, Ml
PARTS SUBSTITUTION AND USING STANDARD PARTS
r
The best substitute for a part is no substitute at all. Use the real parts as often as possible.
Call your distributor, call the catalog parts houses, call the manufacturer of the game,
call the manufacturer of the sub-assembly, call others in the business.
Not everybody in this industry thinks of competitors as enemies.
Sometimes we have no
choice, and we must
replace a component
with something else.
BE INFORMED
You can't make subs unless you
know what you need and what
you have. Buy a Japanese tran-
sistor manual, and find domestic
semiconductor
guides.
Motorola's data books cover their
line, which is the most extensive.
Texas Instrument and others are
useful. For domestic IC suppliers,
get the National Semiconductor
books to start. These manuals
and guides will tell you the speci-
fications of the parts you are try-
ing to replace. These data books
are available through some of the
catalog parts houses like MCM,
DigiKey,Jameco, etc. Electronics
Now is a good magazine (for-
merly Radio-Electronics) for sup-
plier advertisements. All of these
companies and more can be
found near the back of the maga-
zine.
Go beyond symptom-response
servicing and really learn how
things work. Read, read, read.
Subscribe to Electronics Now and
other publications of the sort. You
will learn a lot there. A good un-
derstanding of circuits will al-
low you to make reasonable sub-
stitution decisions.
For example: the capacitors used
in filtering, decoupling and the
like are fairly insensitive to value
and will be OK with any more-
is- better sub. (CSl 1 in the
Electrohome G07, the power
supply filter, or C407 in the
Sanyo, the sweep foldover cap
are typical.) Their job is simply
to smooth out the DC and re-
move any traces of signal. On the
other hand, caps used in the sig-
nal path or in timing applications
are much more critical, and off-
value subs can cause loss of sync
in your video, wrong picture size,
hot flyback transformers, funny
color, and so on. For these the
value of the sub should be pretty
close. You can always use higher
voltage caps than the originals.
You should at least teach your-
self enough electronics to be able
to recognize filter applications in
the various circuits.
e
Transistors have similar story -
subs in the power regulation cir-
cuitry are fairly forgiving, so long
as voltage and current minimums
are met. After all, frequency re-
sponse and switching time are
not too important in DC circuits.
On the other hand, a horizontal
output transistor needs to be re-
placed with a transistor designed
for such use. As an example the
2SD870 will replace the 2SD869
because they are essentially the
same except for the 870's larger
current rating. We can look this
up in our Japanese transistor
manual.
When you look past all the cur-
rent and voltage ratings, all the
sizes and all the shapes, there are
two kinds of horizontal output
... continued on next page.
e

Download Page 7: PDF File | Image

Download Page 8 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.