You’ll also need to determine what connectors you need, as I notice there’s wires directly soldered to connector headers. Quote from: opt2not on November 09, 2019, 01:05:14 am A good start is to check out the manual and see what you’re missing in regards to the boards. The IO board is attached to the joystick and removed from the backplane. The former owner didn't apparently have the wiring harness for it, so he soldered the wires straight to the connectors, that seems like it would be a big hurdle towards properly running it.Īlso, a mud dauber wasp decided to use some memory chips as a nest, so that might be an issue.Īttached are some images of the board, and the joystick that came with it. What would it take to test this and see if it works, and/or how much in parts would it take to build something for it? There's a microcenter about 4 hours away that sells cabinet parts, but might need to find a monitor and any other components it would take to wire it up. It's been taking up space in my shed or garage for over half my life now, so it's time to either fix it and build a cabinet for it, or sell it. I got it in trade for some PC memory in the 90's and had intended to build a cabinet back then to run it, but 25 years later and I still haven't done it. I've been lugging this arcade board from house to house for 24 years or so.
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