Shortly before Christmas, the 48-in-1 multicade arcade machine I had set up in the kitchen died. I didn’t even get the satisfaction of letting the smoke out of the thing. It just quit working.
Whenever troubleshooting an arcade machine, start at the beginning — power. My machine plugs into a power strip that plugs into the wall. I knew the wall outlet was good, so I tested the power strip using my multimeter.
116 volts — perfect. The next place to check power is at the power supply itself. Most switching power supplies put out +5, -5, and +12 volts. The board runs off of the +5v, so I checked that first.
For you math nerds, +2.28 is less than +5. I checked the +12v lead and it was putting out just under +6v. This power supply was toast. Fortunately, out in the garage, I had a spare.
With the new power supply connected to the wall, I checked the +5v rail. +5.07 — perfect! The +12v also looked great. With the two power supplies side by side, I transferred each connection (one by one) from the old power supply to the new one. After all the wires were connected to the new power supply, I removed the old one and mounted the new one into the machine.
Success! While I was inside the cabinet I took the opportunity to clean out the bottom of it.
Those are some of the tokens and coins I found lying around. I also found the cabinet’s original serial number.
Originally, this cabinet was a Williams Robotron, serial number 567487.
While I was in the mood, I did one other cheap upgrade as well.
The bezel around the monitor doesn’t match up very well. The original monitor had died and I replaced it with a computer monitor.
Susan found these sheets of poster board that fade between colors. She picked up two sheets: yellow-to-pink, and blue-to-green. Either one would match the color scheme on this cabinet’s marquee and control panel, so I decided to go with the yellow-to-pink one. I spent five minutes cutting the square out of the middle using a ruler and a razor blade and trimming the edges down with a pair of scissors. If I upgrade to a larger monitor, I’ll make the hole bigger.
Cool article. You almost make it sound FUN.
Nice job on the Bezel.
Looks good, Rob.
If only old school liner arcade power supplies were this easy to troubleshoot / repair / replace! But I’ve gone the switcher route with a few of my cabs, and just bypassed the whole old mess!
Nice step by step.