ebzero89
Enthusiast
It's been stereo modded right? AFAIK, only the MV1 and MV1F have stereo by default.Is it possible to get stereo sound through the MiniGun with a Neo Geo MVS MV1C?
It's been stereo modded right? AFAIK, only the MV1 and MV1F have stereo by default.Is it possible to get stereo sound through the MiniGun with a Neo Geo MVS MV1C?
I haven't modded it yet, but it looks like the stereo left/right channels are accessible on the board. I was wondering if these could be connected somehow to the Minigun?It's been stereo modded right? AFAIK, only the MV1 and MV1F have stereo by default.Is it possible to get stereo sound through the MiniGun with a Neo Geo MVS MV1C?
Is there any current way to connect the MV1C to stereo output on the current Minigun?I'm thinking of changing the audio switch to a 3 pin header / jumper shunt combo. Aside from cost reduction, it's a more compact solution which may come in handy as I work towards optimising things towards the 3D enclosure design.
Another benefit re MVS stereo mods, a header would provide a means of connection from the MVS left / right channels directly to said header of Minigun.
Only though the jamma edge right now. Or route the audio separate and have the minigun do everything else.I haven't modded it yet, but it looks like the stereo left/right channels are accessible on the board. I was wondering if these could be connected somehow to the Minigun?It's been stereo modded right? AFAIK, only the MV1 and MV1F have stereo by default.Is it possible to get stereo sound through the MiniGun with a Neo Geo MVS MV1C?
Is there any current way to connect the MV1C to stereo output on the current Minigun?I'm thinking of changing the audio switch to a 3 pin header / jumper shunt combo. Aside from cost reduction, it's a more compact solution which may come in handy as I work towards optimising things towards the 3D enclosure design.
Another benefit re MVS stereo mods, a header would provide a means of connection from the MVS left / right channels directly to said header of Minigun.
Is there any advantage of maintaining 3 pots for R, G and B signal separately. On the HAS there seems to be a single knob that can be twisted and i presume it alters R, G and B in equal amounts. If that's the case then it's a convenient feature to alter R, G and B to equal values via single knob rather than 3 separate ones which i ended up tweaking to the same values as you suggested before to get .4 V. I'm not sure if the current space would allow to get a single knob thing instead of 3 separate pots.Fleshing out the V2 PCB. If you have any suggestions voice them sooner than later as I'm nearing ordering the PCBs.
- DB15's spaced apart to accommodate UD encoders.
- LPF and AUDIO switch changed to 3 pin male header pins, 2.54mm pitch, to be used with jumper shunts. More compact and cost effective versus actual switches.
- Voltmeter support added.
- Silkscreen flipped to be readable from looking at the PCB with the jamma connector at the rear.
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I am new to this and do not understand a lot of H/W stuff but to me anything that can simplify your life as an end user has my vote. Digital potentiometers sound cool. Am wondering if they come with their own led display displaying the volts. That would get rid of twisting with a philips in addition to asking a person to keep the multimeter hooked on the pins. I have to ask my wife to twist the knobs while i keep a steady hand on the correct pins ensuring i don't short anything. Also, thanks for the tip on the silkscreen being at the bottom. That tells you i just soldered it and hooked it up without focussing a lot on the underside of the pcb.Accuracy. A single 3 gang pot will not provide equal values across each line.
It can be handy to have full control over each individual RGB line too. To calibrate a monitor or to compensate for an ageing / worn / tired monitor that may not have even RGB output.
You only need a few minutes with a multimeter and generally only need to configure them once, so to me it's not a significant burden.
You can add a fourth pot, going from the RGB pot ground pins to common ground for a contrast control but I find this unneccesary.
We could go full fancy pants and utilise a digital potentiometer, with tactile switches to alter values uniformly. I'm actually surprised no-one has done this yet.
Not necessarily. If done correctly, the solution will provide almost perfect balance. Moreover, in the HAS, the pots are responsible for just around 25% of regulation.Accuracy. A single 3 gang pot will not provide equal values across each line.
I'm inclined to stick with 3 x individual pots as a matter of personal preference. I like being able to completely disable a channel which is why there's no regulation.Not necessarily. If done correctly, the solution will provide almost perfect balance. Moreover, in the HAS, the pots are responsible for just around 25% of regulation.Accuracy. A single 3 gang pot will not provide equal values across each line.
It's a tricky thing to gracefully solve.As was mentioned earlier on in the thread, I'd really like a audio input/output selector. Otherwise new features sounds great!
JammaBlue -> R(1k) -> GND -> R(220) -> THS7316Blue
JammaBlue -> R(1k) -> THS7316Blue
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\--> R(220) -> GND