Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems.

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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.. There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around 1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is this possible?

Cheers in advance.

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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

Any numbers at all on the flyback?
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Tuesday, 22 March 2016 21:23:00 UTC, wrote:
Any numbers at all on the flyback?


yes:

TF-1
Tj' 21
TOTOKU
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

TF-1
Tj' 21 (This could be TJt 21)
TOTOKU
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Tuesday, March 22, 2016 at 4:48:48 PM UTC-5, Top Cat wrote:
TF-1
Tj' 21 (This could be TJt 21)
TOTOKU


Your best bet might be Henri at Asti Magnetics, but they have been bought out by PRB. I do not know what state they are in. (not geographically I mean condition sorta, oh wait, I also did forget what state they're in)

If they got old stock I am sure they will sell it.



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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 22/03/2016 21:14, Top Cat wrote:
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.. There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around 1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is this possible?

Cheers in advance.


Is it purely for the raster, or LV supplies also. 1970s presumably just
the former, so half a chance of near enough any LOPT of that time would
do with a bit of jiggery-pokery.
I've never looked inside a LOPT, are they epoxy filled of that era or
still tar filled of the 60s era? Is the bakelite casing likely to
contain asbestos fibre reinforcement if you hacked in to the casing, to
check out the possibility of a rewind, at least "B&W" only voltages?
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.


"Top Cat" wrote in message
...
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.
There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but
there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the
historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output
voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine
what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know
the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around
1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine
what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is
this possible?



YOu may want the game to stay as it is, but if you just want to play the
game, you may want to look at some of the converter boards made that will
let you use a VGA type of display, either CRT or the newer LED types.


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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 03/23/2016 7:35 AM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Top Cat" wrote in message
...
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.
There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but
there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the
historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output
voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine
what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know
the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around
1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine
what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is
this possible?



YOu may want the game to stay as it is, but if you just want to play the
game, you may want to look at some of the converter boards made that will
let you use a VGA type of display, either CRT or the newer LED types.



I have Taito B&W monitor schematics that I am trying to scan, they are
old blueprints and they have turned VERY blue, so my colour scanner is
having a bit of trouble.

Email me and I will send you what I have...

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

En el artículo , N_Cook
escribió:

Is it purely for the raster, or LV supplies also. 1970s presumably just
the former


I would have thought any monitor of that era would have a separate LOPT
and tripler module, so is the OP's problem the LOPT or the tripler?

OP: A few photos would help. Speaks a thousand words.

--
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(='.'=) # ik ben Brussel
(")_(")
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

First a visual inspection gives many informations

Seond, try to check the basics (Transistors, power resistors, blown
fuses, electrolytic caps and diodes)

Fixing this thing is better than trying a replacement.

Top Cat a écrit :
I hope someone can help me.




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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 5:06:30 AM UTC, wrote:
On Tuesday, March 22, 2016 at 4:48:48 PM UTC-5, Top Cat wrote:
TF-1
Tj' 21 (This could be TJt 21)
TOTOKU


Your best bet might be Henri at Asti Magnetics, but they have been bought out by PRB. I do not know what state they are in. (not geographically I mean condition sorta, oh wait, I also did forget what state they're in)

If they got old stock I am sure they will sell it.


Thank you, Have have reached out to them. I'll keep you posted.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 7:19:37 AM UTC, N_Cook wrote:
On 22/03/2016 21:14, Top Cat wrote:
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.. There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around 1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is this possible?

Cheers in advance.


Is it purely for the raster, or LV supplies also. 1970s presumably just
the former, so half a chance of near enough any LOPT of that time would
do with a bit of jiggery-pokery.
I've never looked inside a LOPT, are they epoxy filled of that era or
still tar filled of the 60s era? Is the bakelite casing likely to
contain asbestos fibre reinforcement if you hacked in to the casing, to
check out the possibility of a rewind, at least "B&W" only voltages?


Hi, I believe it's filled with epoxy. I'll try and post some pict in the next few hours. I initially thought about a rewind, but was put off with how accurate they had to be. And many appeared to need machines etc. Sounded beyond my capabilities, perhaps. I'm hoping I could find an alternate model that works maybe.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Wednesday, March 23, 2016 at 2:30:45 PM UTC, Ralph Mowery wrote:


I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.
There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but
there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the
historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output
voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine
what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know
the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around
1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine
what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is
this possible?



YOu may want the game to stay as it is, but if you just want to play the
game, you may want to look at some of the converter boards made that will
let you use a VGA type of display, either CRT or the newer LED types.


I think you've hit the nail on the head, in terms of wanting to keep it as original as possible. I realise that may not be possible eventually, but I so want to try. I have bought a converter ready, and tested it but could not for the life of me get an image to show. Maybe there are other issues too that need attention. But I'll try (against my poor judgement) to focus on one issue at a time. I am so bad at flitting between several things, it's untrue.
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...
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.
There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but
there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the
historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output
voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine
what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know
the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around
1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine
what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is
this possible?



YOu may want the game to stay as it is, but if you just want to play the
game, you may want to look at some of the converter boards made that will
let you use a VGA type of display, either CRT or the newer LED types.



I have Taito B&W monitor schematics that I am trying to scan, they are
old blueprints and they have turned VERY blue, so my colour scanner is
having a bit of trouble.

Email me and I will send you what I have...

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."


Hi John, if I could look at what you have that might be the answer to my prayers. I can't find your e-mail though. Am I being dense? Is it glaring at me somewhere? Cheers.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 5:43:02 AM UTC, Mike Tomlinson wrote:
En el artículo , N_Cook
escribió:

Is it purely for the raster, or LV supplies also. 1970s presumably just
the former


I would have thought any monitor of that era would have a separate LOPT
and tripler module, so is the OP's problem the LOPT or the tripler?

OP: A few photos would help. Speaks a thousand words.

--
(\_/)
(='.'=) # ik ben Brussel
(")_(")


I'll post as many photo's as I can later today. Cheers Mike,


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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 8:20:10 AM UTC, Look165 wrote:
First a visual inspection gives many informations

Seond, try to check the basics (Transistors, power resistors, blown
fuses, electrolytic caps and diodes)

Fixing this thing is better than trying a replacement.

Top Cat a écrit :
I hope someone can help me.


I'll post some asap. Thanks.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 8:20:10 AM UTC, Look165 wrote:
First a visual inspection gives many informations

Seond, try to check the basics (Transistors, power resistors, blown
fuses, electrolytic caps and diodes)

Fixing this thing is better than trying a replacement.

Top Cat a écrit :
I hope someone can help me.


I'll try and repair all I can, but fear that the Flyback may be beyone my capability. I'll work on it though, thank you.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

Top Cat wrote:

I'll try and repair all I can, but fear that the Flyback may be beyone my
capability. I'll work on it though, thank you.


Does the transformer smoke with the suction cup terminal hooked to the CRT?
Did you try to power the circuit with the HV terminal disconnected from the
CRT too?

Frank IZ8DWF
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 11:55:19 AM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:

I'll try and repair all I can, but fear that the Flyback may be beyone my
capability. I'll work on it though, thank you.


Does the transformer smoke with the suction cup terminal hooked to the CRT?
Did you try to power the circuit with the HV terminal disconnected from the
CRT too?

Frank IZ8DWF


I've only tried it with it connected. Should I try it with it out/not-connected? What difference will it make and what should I be looking at when trying this? Cheers.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 11:55:19 AM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
Does the transformer smoke with the suction cup terminal hooked to the CRT?
Did you try to power the circuit with the HV terminal disconnected from the
CRT too?

Frank IZ8DWF


I've only tried it with it connected. Should I try it with it
out/not-connected? What difference will it make and what should I be
looking at when trying this? Cheers.


Shorted CRT, rare but it may happen. You would smoke also the next transformer
in that case.
If you don't know how to safely disconnect the HV cup (and how to safely
test the HV out of the transformer), leave it alone. It can
bite you!

Regards
Frank IZ8DWF


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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 1:57:13 PM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 11:55:19 AM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
Does the transformer smoke with the suction cup terminal hooked to the CRT?
Did you try to power the circuit with the HV terminal disconnected from the
CRT too?

Frank IZ8DWF


I've only tried it with it connected. Should I try it with it
out/not-connected? What difference will it make and what should I be
looking at when trying this? Cheers.


Shorted CRT, rare but it may happen. You would smoke also the next transformer
in that case.
If you don't know how to safely disconnect the HV cup (and how to safely
test the HV out of the transformer), leave it alone. It can
bite you!

Regards
Frank IZ8DWF


I've had it out and cleaned the cup etc, but didn't think to test it unconnected.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 03/24/2016 1:44 AM, Top Cat wrote:

...
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.
There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but
there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the
historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output
voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine
what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know
the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around
1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine
what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is
this possible?



YOu may want the game to stay as it is, but if you just want to play the
game, you may want to look at some of the converter boards made that will
let you use a VGA type of display, either CRT or the newer LED types.



I have Taito B&W monitor schematics that I am trying to scan, they are
old blueprints and they have turned VERY blue, so my colour scanner is
having a bit of trouble.

Email me and I will send you what I have...

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."


Hi John, if I could look at what you have that might be the answer to my prayers. I can't find your e-mail though. Am I being dense? Is it glaring at me somewhere? Cheers.


works - just use the email responder. Or go to my web
site - listed in my signature and find my email there.

Still trying to get legible copies. I have 10 different B&W Taito
monitor schematics!

John :-#)#

--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 10:15:40 AM UTC-4, Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 1:57:13 PM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 11:55:19 AM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
Does the transformer smoke with the suction cup terminal hooked to the CRT?
Did you try to power the circuit with the HV terminal disconnected from the
CRT too?

Frank IZ8DWF

I've only tried it with it connected. Should I try it with it
out/not-connected? What difference will it make and what should I be
looking at when trying this? Cheers.


Shorted CRT, rare but it may happen. You would smoke also the next transformer
in that case.
If you don't know how to safely disconnect the HV cup (and how to safely
test the HV out of the transformer), leave it alone. It can
bite you!

Regards
Frank IZ8DWF


I've had it out and cleaned the cup etc, but didn't think to test it unconnected.


Don't waste your time trying. CRTs don't short that way. If the CRT is full of air, the tube will arc loudly. You could ground the second anode cup to the metal frame and it still won't smoke the flyback. Any secondary short will destroy the horiz output or open the B+ fuse (or both) way before the flyback can smoke. If the flyback smokes, it's bad.



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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 03/24/2016 7:15 AM, Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 1:57:13 PM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 11:55:19 AM UTC, frank wrote:
Top Cat wrote:
Does the transformer smoke with the suction cup terminal hooked to the CRT?
Did you try to power the circuit with the HV terminal disconnected from the
CRT too?

Frank IZ8DWF

I've only tried it with it connected. Should I try it with it
out/not-connected? What difference will it make and what should I be
looking at when trying this? Cheers.


Shorted CRT, rare but it may happen. You would smoke also the next transformer
in that case.
If you don't know how to safely disconnect the HV cup (and how to safely
test the HV out of the transformer), leave it alone. It can
bite you!

Regards
Frank IZ8DWF


I've had it out and cleaned the cup etc, but didn't think to test it unconnected.


Why do you insist that the flyback is bad? Have you tested it with Bob
Parker's LOPT/Flyback ring tester? Or is it physically broken?

Bob's meter can be bought from us (read the assembly manual as that goes
over the theory):

http://www.flippers.com/catalog/prod...ng-tester-p-19

and others of course.

John :-#)#
--
(Please post followups or tech inquiries to the USENET newsgroup)
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
(604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, Video Games)
www.flippers.com
"Old pinballers never die, they just flip out."
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

John-Del wrote:

Don't waste your time trying. CRTs don't short that way. If the CRT is
full of air, the tube will arc loudly. You could ground the second anode
cup to the metal frame and it still won't smoke the flyback. Any secondary
short will destroy the horiz output or open the B+ fuse (or both) way
before the flyback can smoke. If the flyback smokes, it's bad.


ok I stand corrected :-)
I've never happened to find a bad flyback anyway.
Why the B+ fuse don't open (or the output transistor blows) when
the transformer primary is shorted? The load should be quite far away
from normal. Maybe it has other secondaries with shorted loads?

Frank IZ8DWF


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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

"Don't waste your time trying. CRTs don't short that way. "

Actually I have had a few that did, mostly Sonys.

But you are right on the rest of it, at the very least the output transistor will fail before it can burn up the flyback.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

"I think you've hit the nail on the head, in terms of wanting to keep it as original as possible. I realise that may not be possible eventually, but I so want to try. I have bought a converter ready, and tested it but could not for the life of me get an image to show."

I think most of those convertors are designed for NTSC input, and this might not be NTSC. It could be anything.

If you have to retrofit a different fly in there that can be hairy, even scary. The first thing to know is how many pins are used. It may have eight or ten pins, but the less of them used the better. Also look se if there is a focus output, if monochrome it might be automatic focus which gets you off the hook there.

Ideally, there would only be three pins on the bottom connected. If so you got to balance three parameters. One is the pulse width and amplitude for the yoke. Then you have to get the right HV level at the same time. It may require compromises.

If there are scan derived sources off of it the plot thickens. Best to just figure on replacing those sources somehow.

Now, if you get a flyback for it with an open core you can put some windings on it. Either bucking or boosting, or maybe for a supply. I had to put a bucking winding on one a long time ago to match a yoke on a replacement CRT because the yoke native to the chassis would not converge properly. But that was then.

Scan derived sources are not as common in stuff like this as they were in TVs. You might get lucky.

Retrofitting the wrong fly in there can be tricky. You will need a variac. Also probably a selection of capacitors. And then you might have to install a regulator to get the HV where it needs to be.

In this case, since it is probably reactive scanning, the vertical sweep will tell you when you got it right. You are playing with the horizontal so you can't count on that.

This can be done, it is just a matter of how much time and trouble it will take.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.


John-Del wrote:

Don't waste your time trying. CRTs don't short that way. If the CRT is full of air, the tube will arc loudly. You could ground the second anode cup to the metal frame and it still won't smoke the flyback. Any secondary short will destroy the horiz output or open the B+ fuse (or both) way before the flyback can smoke. If the flyback smokes, it's bad.



I used to get dead monitors from a Burroughs service tech, and some
of the CRTS were shorted internally. That caused spectacular failures,
when they shorted. Just because you have never seen one doesn't mean
that it can't happen. These were 12" TTL input monitors for computer
terminals and they had some internal welds that had failed.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

Shorted/leaky anode to ground (dag ground) was pretty common in 32" Sonys of a certain era. I am not sure exactly what happened to them, I know the Hstat block was built in but that is not likely to short, it would go open. (and they did not)

I am thinking some sort of problem with the glass or something. There is no path to ground except for the grounded aquadag. The ones I found shorted were still shorted when the CRT socket is removed, it was not an anode to cathode or whatever short, it had something to do with the dag.

Maybe a slight little blow hole in the glass, and a subsequent (after years) carbon track through there. And some of these CRTs tested good on a tester. Just the HV was a dead ****ing short.

This is because CRT testers cannot test the whole thing. There were two types, one was an emission tester and the other a beam current tester. The emission tester was cheaper and simply measured current to G1. The beam current tester which was capable of more accurate readings measured current from G2. Some of the better testers had a function to check G3 (focus electrode) leakage but none of them stuck 20 KV on the anode. It was impractical to do that.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Monday, March 28, 2016 at 8:51:46 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Shorted/leaky anode to ground (dag ground) was pretty common in 32" Sonys of a certain era. I am not sure exactly what happened to them, I know the Hstat block was built in but that is not likely to short, it would go open. (and they did not)

I am thinking some sort of problem with the glass or something. There is no path to ground except for the grounded aquadag. The ones I found shorted were still shorted when the CRT socket is removed, it was not an anode to cathode or whatever short, it had something to do with the dag.

Maybe a slight little blow hole in the glass, and a subsequent (after years) carbon track through there. And some of these CRTs tested good on a tester. Just the HV was a dead ****ing short.


You're right. I forgot about those earlier Trinis. I think I saw maybe 2 or 3 tops shorted in the second anode ( the ones that used the coaxial anode connector). Replace the SG613, damper diode, and 867A regulator with Sony factory parts, and they'd blow up in a split second. Still didn't damage the flyback. Later Trinitrons did not have this problem.





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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

I didn't mean those, I meant the later ones with the kamikazi power supply using I think the 2SC4834s.

If I am not mistaken, those 2SG613s mostly blew because of a drive fault. Lose the negative pulse to the gate and it stays on too long and boom.

In the earlier ones, I think the SRC (sine resonance choke) saved alot of flybacks from overload. The SRC was there to increase the efficiency of the HV rectifiers.

Talk of these Sonys brings back a memory. I was working on a stock 26" console. (you know a toilet seart manufacturer made those cabinets, the only one could meet the specs, and like three guys could sit on top of one and you can still roll it across a thickly carpeted floor) I was pulling the control unit from the front and somehow caught the CRT board and broke the neck.

I thought ih ****, there goes a couple hundred bucks, but that ain't how it is. Under warranty all you sent back was the neck of the CRT. They said to write it up as "unable to get good convergence". I almost had to laugh, with the neck broken like that, damn right I can't get good convergence. They even paid me to change it ! Well after all Sony paid them.

Really, it was dishonest but things like that happened VERY rarely.

And now I work for factory service for RSQ, which is a marketer of Karaoke machines. They are cheap Chinese or Korean built, but what isn't anymore ? They are actually modified DVD players. In the same building is a retail outlet for them and a few other things. It's like I got two jobs in one. But anyway, they do not record the serial numbers or anything. If I fix something and it breaks again nobody has any way of knowing. Also, as I pointed out to them, the customers could rob us blind if they knew.

Good old American business, but the money spends just fine.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 03/24/2016 1:44 AM, Top Cat wrote:

...
I hope someone can help me.

I have an extremely old CRT attached to a Space Invaders B&W arcade cabinet.
There is no available schematic, that I can find. The flyback has died but
there is no modern replacement, mainly because the documentation for the
historical model is non existent. So I dont know the input or output
voltages, I have no circuit diagram, and I cannot find anything to determine
what its input/output parameters can be. I do have the old flyback, I know
the monitor size, and I have the actual circuit.

The model is marked as "Toei GM-140 TV MONITOR". It was produced around
1979; or from 1976 onwards.

My question is this: Can one retro/reverse engineer or somehow determine
what modern equivalent could replace a flyback in this circumstance. Is
this possible?



YOu may want the game to stay as it is, but if you just want to play the
game, you may want to look at some of the converter boards made that will
let you use a VGA type of display, either CRT or the newer LED types.



I have Taito B&W monitor schematics that I am trying to scan, they are
old blueprints and they have turned VERY blue, so my colour scanner is
having a bit of trouble.

Email me and I will send you what I have...

John :-#)#

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Hi John, if I could look at what you have that might be the answer to my prayers. I can't find your e-mail though. Am I being dense? Is it glaring at me somewhere? Cheers.


Hi Chris,

I have now scanned my files and they are legible. Is there any marking
on your monitor? Letter and number codes? Failing that, what is the
number on the picture tube?

I scanned these as TIFs and they are huge (100mb) because they are
blueprints. If anyone can convert scanned blueprints to straight B&W I
would be happy to share these via dropbox.

My return email is valid! Or replace spam with jrr if you prefer.

John :-#)#

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"I scanned these as TIFs and they are huge (100mb) because they are
blueprints. If anyone can convert scanned blueprints to straight B&W I
would be happy to share these via dropbox. "


Pretty sure I can do that in PSP, and save them in JPG format so they aren't so huge.
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Thanks for all the chat. The flyback had smoke emanating from the point where the cable comes out. I switched it off and am trying to find information on what I should and shouldn't be doing to repaid the chassis pcb.


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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 8:41:39 PM UTC, wrote:
"I think you've hit the nail on the head, in terms of wanting to keep it as original as possible. I realise that may not be possible eventually, but I so want to try. I have bought a converter ready, and tested it but could not for the life of me get an image to show."


I think most of those convertors are designed for NTSC input, and this might not be NTSC. It could be anything.

If you have to retrofit a different fly in there that can be hairy, even scary. The first thing to know is how many pins are used. It may have eight or ten pins, but the less of them used the better. Also look se if there is a focus output, if monochrome it might be automatic focus which gets you off the hook there.

Ideally, there would only be three pins on the bottom connected. If so you got to balance three parameters. One is the pulse width and amplitude for the yoke. Then you have to get the right HV level at the same time. It may require compromises.

If there are scan derived sources off of it the plot thickens. Best to just figure on replacing those sources somehow.

Now, if you get a flyback for it with an open core you can put some windings on it. Either bucking or boosting, or maybe for a supply. I had to put a bucking winding on one a long time ago to match a yoke on a replacement CRT because the yoke native to the chassis would not converge properly. But that was then.

Scan derived sources are not as common in stuff like this as they were in TVs. You might get lucky.

Retrofitting the wrong fly in there can be tricky. You will need a variac.. Also probably a selection of capacitors. And then you might have to install a regulator to get the HV where it needs to be.

In this case, since it is probably reactive scanning, the vertical sweep will tell you when you got it right. You are playing with the horizontal so you can't count on that.

This can be done, it is just a matter of how much time and trouble it will take.


That's super advice and well advanced. I am clearly in over my head. I will start reading and learning more on the subject, before I attempt to fix it. I really do want to keep it original for the sake of preservation. I'm not trying to make a buck or just to play the game. I'm exited to bring it back to life. ...One day.
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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 11/06/2016 23:43, Top Cat wrote:
Thanks for all the chat. The flyback had smoke emanating from the point where the cable comes out.


I switched it off and am trying to find information on what I should and
shouldn't be doing to repaid the chassis pcb.

Look Here?

http://www.hrdiemen.com/reparation/flyback/index

Colin

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Default Flyback replacement on a historical arcade machine.

On 06/11/2016 8:19 AM, Top Cat wrote:
On Thursday, March 24, 2016 at 8:41:39 PM UTC, wrote:
"I think you've hit the nail on the head, in terms of wanting to keep it as original as possible. I realise that may not be possible eventually, but I so want to try. I have bought a converter ready, and tested it but could not for the life of me get an image to show."


I think most of those convertors are designed for NTSC input, and this might not be NTSC. It could be anything.

If you have to retrofit a different fly in there that can be hairy, even scary. The first thing to know is how many pins are used. It may have eight or ten pins, but the less of them used the better. Also look se if there is a focus output, if monochrome it might be automatic focus which gets you off the hook there.

Ideally, there would only be three pins on the bottom connected. If so you got to balance three parameters. One is the pulse width and amplitude for the yoke. Then you have to get the right HV level at the same time. It may require compromises.

If there are scan derived sources off of it the plot thickens. Best to just figure on replacing those sources somehow.

Now, if you get a flyback for it with an open core you can put some windings on it. Either bucking or boosting, or maybe for a supply. I had to put a bucking winding on one a long time ago to match a yoke on a replacement CRT because the yoke native to the chassis would not converge properly. But that was then.

Scan derived sources are not as common in stuff like this as they were in TVs. You might get lucky.

Retrofitting the wrong fly in there can be tricky. You will need a variac.. Also probably a selection of capacitors. And then you might have to install a regulator to get the HV where it needs to be.

In this case, since it is probably reactive scanning, the vertical sweep will tell you when you got it right. You are playing with the horizontal so you can't count on that.

This can be done, it is just a matter of how much time and trouble it will take.


That's super advice and well advanced. I am clearly in over my head. I will start reading and learning more on the subject, before I attempt to fix it. I really do want to keep it original for the sake of preservation. I'm not trying to make a buck or just to play the game. I'm exited to bring it back to life. ...One day.


For a converter you want to get the Composite Video style, not the RGB.
Your game (SI) puts out B&W composite video...

Something like this:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Tv-Rca-Compo...-/321366580263

John :-#)#

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