Quick update, I went into the board settings and trying turning Mono/Stereo on and off and it didn't seem to make difference after saving.
The menu is all in Japanese, but using a CPS2 manual I navigated to what I assumed was the sound setting.
Hello everyone, it's been a long while since I have been on klov. Many of my arcade projects have been in storage for several years and now I have some time to work on them. Anyway...
I have a Dynamo Z-Back I am restoring and I have a CPS2 18-1 board I bought several years ago when they came...
Possible, smalltownguy mentioned he was having the same problem in this thread.
The video you took and the one I took of mine doesn't seem similar.
My B+ isn't solid, it goes down as the problem starts and goes lower as the problem gets worse.
I'm going to read over the other thread and see...
Yeah, I have been over the bottom of the PCB again and again, nothing looks bad at all. Anything that is suspect, I wiggle and jiggle :).
I haven't tried hitting it to see if it makes it worse, but it gets worse and worse the longer the monitor is on.
Thanks Cadillacman,
I put in a new flyback first thing a while back, so I know it's not those solder joints.
I just checked R111 and it's in there tight.
R108 wasn't really bad, my ohm meter tested the new the at the same. Maybe my meter can't test below 1.0 very accurately?
Anyway, I'll...
So I did was Kevin suggested and tested R108. I pulled one leg, set my ohm meter to lowest ohm setting (200) and tested. It came back at 0.8
I assume that is not correct for a .33ohm resistor?
Thanks guys, moved the center adjustment to the center post and did remove the sync I had on pin 7, so now it's just on 10. It's working great now, except for this one corner. Is it a tube thing, or a chassis?
This monitor has a smaller version of this issue when I took it out of the cab. Figured I would try to clean it up. I flipped the chassis over and did the normal inspection, finding 1 cracked solder and fixed it up. At the same time, the Horizontal Width was way to big, the little adjustment...