jugu
Professional
I was testing this with the I/O in a Vewlix cabinet. I'll try again using the Sega Type 3 I/O I have in my Transformers cabinet.
Thanks! I believe I will need it pretty soon.The link to the old picture of the network setting for Virtua Fighter 5 FS isn't working anymore. Lucky I saved it before Photo bucket high jacked it. Here it is again for anyone else in the future who needs it.
Yes, I will. I am a big fan of VF. i have PCBs of VF2-4 and now getting a Lindy for 5! ThanksI hope you enjoy! It’s one of my favorite fighters. It’s good to see a fellow VF fan
Type 1 IO also should satisfy it I believeI am running into this same issue now. I am using a noami 2 jvs to jamma and how do I enter the network settings? I assume I need a type 3 sega jvs?
PICs are notoriously picky to program. I'd be most suspect there.Also Error 15 means I have a bad PIC? The PIC I have is brand new.
I only have 2 PIC's to test here which I bought new. There are 2 .bin files I burned onto these chips and got the same result. I couldn't have had some bad luck and got 2 bad PIC's right?Type 1 IO also should satisfy it I believe
PICs are notoriously picky to program. I'd be most suspect there.
So try to rewrite a few times?It's most likely not the chips but programmer settings and file parsing. PICs can be reprogrammed so trial and error may be needed but at least you don't have to UV erase anything.
Change settings, try new bin files, compile from source if you can find it... that kinda thingSo try to rewrite a few times?
All I am doing is having the .bin on my desktop, loading it and burning it with default settings, I am not skilled in value reading or changing if that is what you mean?Change settings, try new bin files, compile from source if you can find it... that kinda thing
You're right because I might have figured it out. Now I am entering JVS menus after but I don't think I can control it with my Naomi 2 JVSThe burning settings definitely need to be exactly right. As I mentioned above (edited in), PICs are microcontroller ICs. They perform specific programmatic functions in circuit, not just storing data the system uses for ROM.
It took me a lot of trial and error to program my 1st PIC, but the satisfaction is worth it.
Make sure the IO is appropriately powered, but regardless of that, there are 2 buttons on the motherboard above the PIC slot. Using these you should be able to navigate test menus etc. You can probably fumble thru the menus to find JVS IO info/tests for your IO to see if it's even being seen.I may have solved the PIC issue but the issue now I have is when I choose a game, it goes straight to its service menu and I cannot do anything from there. So I assume that is because I don't have the proper JVS?