Today, I have a Raiden 2 PCB purchased “with Graphics Glitches”:
This PCB uses the -5v power rail for audio. Make sure that your PSU is also providing -5V.
I’ll power up the PCB and look for the graphical glitches mentioned by the seller.
As you can see, there are a lot of nonsense numbers going on here.
Even the text is problematic.
The following “all rights reserved” is even corrupted.
By the way, there was also a sync problem when I first tried the PCB. Seibu PCBs work at 55.xx something Hz and not every monitor can tolerate this frequency. Then I realized that my 9” PVM has a V-HOLD pot on the back. When I played with it a little bit, the sync problem got fixed. This v-hold can even be on regular TV’s too but sometimes it’s inside the case.
The first thing I usually do when I get a board is to clean the JAMMA connector.
For this I use the metal polisher in the photo.
Although now the JAMMA connector is clean, of course the problem is not solved.
So let’s check the ROMs as a first step.
The contact points get dirty over time with rust, dirt and oxidation. I clean the legs of the ROMs with an X-acto Knife and rinse them with IPA.
Then I move on to reading the ROMs and comparing them with the ROMs from MAME (Hamster’s ROMIdent site is very helpful).
With one of the ROMs, I got a warning that a single pin on the chip cannot be read. After cleaning that pin, it reads correctly.

This PCB uses the -5v power rail for audio. Make sure that your PSU is also providing -5V.
I’ll power up the PCB and look for the graphical glitches mentioned by the seller.

As you can see, there are a lot of nonsense numbers going on here.

Even the text is problematic.

The following “all rights reserved” is even corrupted.





By the way, there was also a sync problem when I first tried the PCB. Seibu PCBs work at 55.xx something Hz and not every monitor can tolerate this frequency. Then I realized that my 9” PVM has a V-HOLD pot on the back. When I played with it a little bit, the sync problem got fixed. This v-hold can even be on regular TV’s too but sometimes it’s inside the case.

The first thing I usually do when I get a board is to clean the JAMMA connector.
For this I use the metal polisher in the photo.

Although now the JAMMA connector is clean, of course the problem is not solved.
So let’s check the ROMs as a first step.

The contact points get dirty over time with rust, dirt and oxidation. I clean the legs of the ROMs with an X-acto Knife and rinse them with IPA.



Then I move on to reading the ROMs and comparing them with the ROMs from MAME (Hamster’s ROMIdent site is very helpful).
With one of the ROMs, I got a warning that a single pin on the chip cannot be read. After cleaning that pin, it reads correctly.




