Re: starhawk problems

From: William Boucher <wboucher6_at_cogeco.ca>
Date: Sat Apr 16 2011 - 13:47:41 EDT

Oops! Sorry, my mistake, the PCB is single-sided and so does not have plated through holes nor holes on the top side so installing a socket on the bottom would not make sense. Guess I should think before typing. Maybe I need another coffee.
Try www.arcadechips.com This is where I buy the LF13331 from and prices are very good.

William Boucher
http://www.biltronix.com
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: William Boucher
  To: vectorlist@vectorlist.org
  Sent: Saturday, April 16, 2011 1:33 PM
  Subject: Re: VECTOR: starhawk problems

  The tip mentioned certainly will work however since the original LF13331 is still available from a couple of sources, I would prefer to just keep using them, maybe stock a few just in case.

  Another tip, rather than soldering an equivelent function but mirror-pinned chip upsidedown to a socket and installing it from the top side of the PCB, I suggest to simply remove the original socket and install it (or a new socket) from the bottom side of the PCB. This way, the new chip simply plugs in from the bottom side without soldering stress or flipping it or anything. Too easy?

  William Boucher
  http://www.biltronix.com
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Kevin Moore
    To: vectorlist@vectorlist.org
    Cc: vernimark
    Sent: Saturday, April 16, 2011 8:28 AM
    Subject: Re: VECTOR: starhawk problems

    Found this little tid bit searching the vector list. If that doesn't work, I might have a spare or two.

    Kevin

    RE: LF13331N questions
        a.. This message: [ Message body ] [ More options ]
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    From: Tom McClintock <tomm_at_mgcap.com>
    Date: Tue Jun 11 2002 - 16:09:28 EDT

    Pins 5 and 12 are your +/- 15V inputs, so I would start
    with the regulators, and work you way back to the power
    supply before replacing the LF13331 switch.

    Rodger was kind enough to come up with a (relatively
    inexpensive) replacement for the chip.

    -------------
    Yup, it's an obsolete part. It's getting hard to find.
     How about
    making your own?

    If I had any ambition I'd be making these myself and
    selling them to
    anyone that wants them. But someone else can do that,
    not me.

    You will need an IC socket and a not-the-best analog
    switch IC such as a
    DG212, DG202, or MAX332. (Something with a similar
    on-resistance to the
    LF13331 and can handle the power supply voltage).

    Put the IC UPSIDE DOWN on the IC socket. Pin 1 of the
    IC socket will be
    pin 8 of the IC and vice versa. Solder it to the
    socket. Trim off the
    extra pin length.

    Now plug it into the game. Pin 1 of the SOCKET plugs
    in to the pin 1
    position of the game (you might want to paint a dot on
    the IC (pin 1 of
    socket, pin 8 of IC).

    The disable pin of the LF13331 no longer works on this
    retrofit, but
    according to Cinamatronics schematics it isn't used
    anyway.

    Well, at least it sounds good in theory. Perhaps
    someone some day will
    give it a try. (I don't have games any more).

    -----------

    On Tue, 11 June 2002, "Mills, Lewis" wrote

>

    On Sat, Apr 16, 2011 at 6:09 AM, vernimark <vernimark@vernimark.com> wrote:

      Yes I’ve a space wars... do you know where to buy an LF13331?

      DAC80s are soldered, I’ll try to remove them without any damage

      Thank you,

      vernimark

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

      From: owner-vectorlist@vectorlist.org [mailto:owner-vectorlist@vectorlist.org] On Behalf Of Rich Marquette
      Sent: sabato 16 aprile 2011 13.03
      To: vectorlist@vectorlist.org
      Subject: RE: VECTOR: starhawk problems

      Based on the picture, I would think that the problem is in the monitor itself. Probably in one of the digital parts of it (DACs or Analog switch) Do you have another Cinematronics vector game you can put the CPU board into?

      You could try swapping the two DAC chips around on the monitor and see if the picture changes.

      Rich

      From: owner-vectorlist@vectorlist.org [mailto:owner-vectorlist@vectorlist.org] On Behalf Of vernimark
      Sent: Saturday, April 16, 2011 6:01 AM
      To: Vectorlist
      Subject: VECTOR: starhawk problems

      Hi All,

      after a long time I’m trying to continue with my star hawk project; it is almost complete with the ecception on the most important part: PCB J

      this is what I see:

      http://www.vernimark.com/temp/starhawk01.jpg

      star ships are complete when fly on the top-left quarter of the screen but then lose some vectors moving on the bottom-right. Sounds are ok.

      background is incomplete as shown in the picture.

      The game works, I can insert coins and play with one or two players selecting different speeds.

      Do you have any idea?

      On your opinion is it a PCB problem or board problem?

      Thank you,

      vernimark

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Received on Sat Apr 16 13:46:59 2011

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