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Toki board with cutting audio.

daeds

Beginner
Joined
Aug 3, 2025
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Hello there everyone,
I've been looking for a Toki board and I have a pretty good deal but the guy says it cuts sound, it's like 5 seconds clear and then 5 seconds of noise,
As a beginner in this matter I ask all the more expert people here, could this be an easy fix or should I stay away from this one and look for another?
I imagine it is a bootleg because it has a daughter board on top and as far as I know the original one doesnt:
1755971827597.png

Thanks a lot in advance.
 
If you don’t know how to fix it. Dont buy it.

Buy a working one.
I like learning and sometimes I buy almost broken stuff to learn a bit more and try to repair it, just wanted to know if it's doable and easy to find the culprit or a bigger problem like a CPU or something like that. :) Been learning how to fix stuff for a while now but I'm new to all of these arcade boards and they are scary.
 
Start by dumping all the EPROMs and checking against MAME. Then looking at the audio circuit.
Hm, that's going to be hard without having proper tools for these boards I suppose, will try to check with some friends if they have the means for eprom dumping.
 
There is a fairly good chance that the custom HB-41 is failing and needs to be replaced:

https://jammarcade.net/seibu-hb-41-reproduction/

Some good places to start testing would be checking power going to the LA4460 audio amp on the board.

If you want to be doing board repair you really want a good microscope, soldering station, hot air station, and EEPROM burner and eraser at a minimum. Would also recommend a desoldering gun (or at least a desoldering pump).
 
There is a fairly good chance that the custom HB-41 is failing and needs to be replaced:

https://jammarcade.net/seibu-hb-41-reproduction/

Some good places to start testing would be checking power going to the LA4460 audio amp on the board.

If you want to be doing board repair you really want a good microscope, soldering station, hot air station, and EEPROM burner and eraser at a minimum. Would also recommend a desoldering gun (or at least a desoldering pump).
Invaluable tips, thank you so much! It's hard to start repairing these fellas.
 
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