gregf |
Ramtek's Trivia promoter
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Reged: 09/21/03
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Posts: 8623
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Loc: southern CA, US
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Re: Unknown Pong clone in bootleg blue... *edit*
02/26/15 12:24 PM
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>>Okay...so I see two slide switches on pcb which I will guess first one is for the >>winning score. Does 11 and 15 appear next to one of the slide switches?
>Yes, 11 -- 15 by the upper left switch.
>>The second slide switch could be for operator to set pong/ball speed to either fast >>speed or slow speed. That is what is available for Chicago Coin's TV Ping Pong pcb.
>Second switch, the one on the right, says S -- T.
I wonder if that switch is operator selection for game to be soccer or tennis. If it is for some other option, I am not sure what it would be for.
>>I am note sure yet of what company marketed that pcb you have in the photos. If it >>was Chicago Coin or Mirco, there should be something printed on pcb. Likely marketed >>by a company even smaller than Mirco imo, but not sure yet of which company. There >>could be something on Dan's site or also on TAFA.
>On the front, "REV A" appears in the upper left corner and a faint "BENCH TEST" stamp >appears on the upper right heat sink area.
>On the back, "EC-715" appears in the upper right corner.
>The only other markings are the component designations. Also, there is no A,B,C... >1,2,3... markings for the rows and columns. Instead, each IC has just a number, 1 >through 91. Most of the chips are date coded from 1973 with a few marked for 1972.
That is the same manner that Amutronics has printed in the logic schematics for TV Ping Pong which is a dedicated two-player only pong clone. I don't have any paperwork that matches this particular pcb to help identify what game the pcb is for.
Edited by gregf (03/06/15 10:04 PM)
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