Star Tech Journal

Issue: 1996-May - Vol 18 Issue 3

May 1996
CID
A SHORT COURSE IN TERMINOLOGY
STAR*TEcH
Journal
Gootlldea!
Douglas "Enzo" McCallum
Shiawassee Technical Services
Lansing, Michigan
VERBAL SHORT
''Fix up a nice looking
Curs
Though we carry a box full of
tools around with us, there are
other tools we use to get the job
done. One of these other tools is
the terminology of the industry.
Part numbers can become words.
If I have my head buried in a pin-
ball and ask you for a "23-850,"
you likely would get me a sole-
noid coil without my explaining.
I don't need to ask for a "40 pin
DIP microprocessor integrated
circuit type Z-80" when anyone
this business knows what "Z-
80" means. When a fuse burns
open, we call it "blown," though
if we found one in the tool box
with broken glass but electrically
intact we would not say "blown."
Why? Because the word actually
means something. It means that
excess current flowed through
the fuse until it "blew."
-n
DEFINITIONS
For a collection of electronic
parts to do anything useful they
must be wired in a "circuit." That
word isn't arbitrary. Current
flows from a source such as one
end of a battery or a generator.
This current then flows through
the components involved and
then returns to the other end of
a.he battery or generator. The cur-
• rent has now come full circle,
thus completing a "circuit." (It's
from Latin. A circus is so named
because it takes place in a ring
or circle.) Any given circuit is a
specific arrangement of compo-
nents, a specific path for current.
One type of failure in a circuit is
unwanted current flow between
two points due to a failed part or
two parts touching together. In
this situation the current doesn't
flow all the way through the cir-
cuit as it should, instead it makes
a "short" circuit. That is "short"
as in not the complete length.
WITH MEANING
I have taken the long way
around, but my point is this: The
word "short" actually means
something. You shouldn't use the
word to refer to an "open" or an
intermittent connection, or as a
generic word meaning any old
electrical problem. It might be
0 K for a truck driver to use the
word when he has a bad connec-
tor to his trailer lights, but we are
technicians and should know bet-
ter.
A "short" or "short circuit" means
only one thing. It means an un-
wanted path for current. If that
is not what you have, don't call it
a short. An "intermittent open"
is not a "short."
Now if only I could stop saying
"bulb" when I mean "lamp."
older jukebox and make
it avai/,able for rental to
upscale stores as part of
window disp/,ays.
Doesn't even have to
,,
wor, k .
Douglas 'Enzo' McCallum
Shiawassee Technical Services
~ Got::::~
::~;gan
Mail it to: Good Idea c/o STJ,
POB 35, Medford, NJ 08055.
Or fax co: Good Idea c/o STJ
609/654-1441
Email: startech@cyberenet.net
STAR TECH
JOURNAL
INDEX ONLINE
All tech topic titles pub-
lished from 1979 (Volume
l) through 1996 (Volume
l 7) are currently being
put up on STJ's website
on the internet. Not all
are up, but STJ expects
the entire index to be
available in time.
To access STJ's website,
point your browser to:
http://wv,;w.cyberENET.net/-startech
STAR*TEcH
Journal
May 1996
CID
WILLIAMS JOHNNY MNEMONIC
BLOWING FUSES INTERMITIENilY
Williams Parts & Service
Williams Games
Chicago, Illinois
SYMPTOM
Hand magnet causing fuse to
blow intermittently.
SOLUTION
This procedure will move the
hand electromagnet power sup-
ply circuit from fuse Fl04 to fuse
F103, which is not used by any
other circuit in the game. These
fuses are located on the Power
Driver Board Assembly.
PROCEDURE
1. Remove the balls from the
game and disconnect the power.
2. Raise the playfield and lean it
against the backbox.
3. Locate the 6-pin connector
containing two red/brown 18 ga.
DIAGRAM A
wires in the same pin, two red/
white wires in the same pin, one
blue/yellow wire in its own pin,
and one purple/blue wire in its
own pin. This connector comes
off the back panel assembly and
is located at the back of the
.
playfield.
4. Cut the paired red/brown
wires on the side of the connec-
tor going away from the playfield
and towards the backbox as
shown in DIAGRAM A.
5. Splice the wires as shown in
DIAGRAM B.
6. Cut an 8 ft. length of 18 ga.
wire and splice into the wire end
left at the connector. Run the
other end into the backbox and
press the wire end into position
no. 1 at the insulation displace-
ment connector J 107, located on
the Power Driver Board Assem-
bly. NOTE: IT IS VERY IM-
PORTANT THAT GOOD
ELECTRICAL CONTACT IS
MADE AT THE IDC 0107)
WHEN INSTALLING THE 18
GA. WIRE!
7. Replace the fuse at position
F103 with a 4 amp slow blow A
250v fuse.
W
8. Dress the new 18 ga. jumper
wire inside the black corrugated
cable tube at the right side of the
backbox. Wire tie as needed at
the playfield, making sure to stay
clear of all moving mechanisms.
Route the jumper inside the
backbox as needed.
DIAGRAM B

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