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I have a couple electronic pachinko machines, a Nishijin "Elfin" and a Daiichi "3-One-Model".

A friend says the knob will only work if the machines are hooked up to a cash machine. That enables a servo or stepper motor, which operates the ball-driving mechanism.

I see the connectors where the cash machine interfaces. My question is, is it a simple job of electrically tying some digital inputs high/low, or would I need to emulate a more complex communication protocol (i.e. "act like a cash machine") to get the knob to work?

Or is there some other way to enable the motor elsewhere on the circuit board. (I am an engineer, so you do not need to simplify the explanation)

Thanks in advance!

2007-05-13 09:41:45 · 2 answers · asked by HyperDog 7 in Travel Asia Pacific Japan

Everything works except for the knob. I can load it with balls and shoot them by manually reaching into the back of the machine and flipping the lever. The video works normally, and the machine pays out jackpots.

I think disabling the knob is for security - so the machines cannot easily be tricked into working without the cash machine in the circuit.

2007-05-13 17:46:54 · update #1

2 answers

It should be straightforward. Have you actually tried balls in your machines? AFAIK a pachiko machine will run as long as it has current and balls dumped into it-the cash machine just dispenses the balls.

2007-05-13 11:37:12 · answer #1 · answered by michinoku2001 7 · 0 0

How about check this sites? www.stealthhomeamusement.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pachinko

2007-05-16 13:43:47 · answer #2 · answered by ets2521 5 · 1 0

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