We have been updating our "Parts" page on our website, with links to a lot of the products we use when we do repairs, check it out at www.LyonsArcade.com/parts.html , we'll see you over there!
@@LyonsArcade Oh he heard and he's been strutting around wearing sunglasses. Fame is a strong elixir. Thanks guys, much appreciated. So many brownie bonus points and triple bonus time❤️
Amazing there are still vintage units like this in good operating condition. I remember when they were everywhere. There was an art to spinning those wheels! Lol.
Wow,,fond memories of these in 70s..they were everywhere,arcades,cross channel ferries,cinema`s airports......Simple but stood the test of time ! Thanks guys for this trip down memory lane ;) x
Amazing as this was also the second arcade game I ever played! This was around 1980/81 at a UK Pontins camp. The first game I played (in the same arcade) was Night Driver 👍
@@-abacchus My first game was another Kee Games/Atari game (I think) called "Tank II". Both were at a long gone ice cream shop we used to go to when I was little
@@-abacchus Oh my god! Night Driver, I forgot about that one! One of the earliest first-person perspective games, or was it the first? The first game I ever played was pong -- the main issue with pong was you need to find an opponent of a similar skill level to you or it was a blow-out (one way or the other).
I remember playing these a few times on the boat from Sweden to Finland as a kid, i never was big on the arcade machines though since it cost money that i didnt really have. Its funny how i even remember the sound and the oil slicks all these years later even though i didnt play these games much at all.
40 years later and i can still remember the feel of the steering wheels and the shifters. The one we played the most was on the camping ground close to the local beach, if you played it with wet feets you got electrocuted by the metal accelerator.
I must have dropped a small fortune in quarters or tokens in many of the machines you have brought back to life. It is so good to see them still operating. Many of these were never intended to last more than a few years, yet, decades later they remain. Awesome work and really appreciate the videos.
I only ever saw a few of these back in the day. Never played one, they were always broken. Super Sprint was my jam in the mid to late 80's. The 4 player version was awesome.
Astounded that it worked so well. True wee gem you got there. Issue with 3D printed parts, is they can fail too easily. We would 3D print a part, make a mould from it, then resin cast a new part from the mould. This tends to be a lot stronger, even more than the original. Great video, keep'em coming.
This one takes me back. When I was a teenager in the 70's me and my friend would run a roll of quarters through this game racing each other. Ours was located in a pharmacy.
Oh man that Hole, I’m not sure what’s worse having your side painted over like mine or having a hole like yours to repair. Glad your doing this video it’s great inspiration. Thanks joe 😎👍
I can 100% agree with that atari's schematics are out the chain they are so detailed I always tell people if you buy an Atari game especially in arcade machine make sure you get the manual with it it usually has the schematics in it
Wow loved playing this classic back in the day. Best driving game ever produced. So freaking fun sliding around the track. Just spinning the wheels. Had one of these about 8 years ago love it Joe.
Fantastic! I was about 8 when this game came out and we used to visit an arcade at a restaurant called the "Big Bow Wow" in Howard Beach, NY. They had all the coolest video games!
I think I remember playing this one as a kid somewhere. I just downloaded the rom to play it on my PC modded Arcade1up Ridge Racer! I for sure remember the sound effects and such. Very cool and great job on getting another piece of history running again!
You may have been a glint... but I was 12, and totally remember this game. It wasn't common, but I seem to recall seeing one in the arcades at Cedar Point when I was 12(ish). Arcade games were just magical boxes showing of the technological prowess of the day back then, but it's cool to see the innards today with all the knowledge about this stuff I've acquired over the years, and learn stuff about the hardware, like it running on a 6502, which isn't that big of a news flash. Atari liked the MOS 6502, even the 2600 had a variation of the 6502.
one of my all time favorite games, my local grocery store had this in the foyer area. those steering wheels had such a great weight and would spin very nicely(i may be somewhat guilty of some of the wear of the steering wheel), sounds strange maybe but if you know you know.
My 7 year old, Elijah, does an excellent Ron impression. "People! Come on now people!" You're almost as cool as Derick from Vice Grip Garage in his eyes.
Tell Elijah I've been fixing old cars longer than Derick :) I've got a 66 Plymouth Valiant, a 69 Mustang, a 64 Mercury Comet, an 83 Chevy Silverado and an 86 GMC Sierra! Derick's better at it than me though!
@@LyonsArcade he's fixing old cars too. Right now he's in the middle of building an S10 dune buggy, with a little help from dad. There's vids in our channel.
Black and white 27 inch monitor from back in the day Pretty cool Even back then a 27 inch TV was a big TV The 70s, even 80s, if you had more than 1 TV you were doing good Having a TV in the front room, the bedrooms, with cable boxes and VCRs, you knew you were in the upper middle class Most people had a 19 inch black and white TV in the front room I had a 13 inch black and white in the front room Seeing the first house with a 25 inch color TV in the front room, master bedroom and guest bedroom, and a VCR and cable box with a remote wireless controller, 😳 WOW Circa 1980. That was the first year they had ir remote controls It was amazing I mean like walking into the future The house was brand new Had circuit breakers where I had only seen fuses A 60 amp single phase 4 fuses The new house had 50 breakers, 200 amp 240 volt dual phase So amazing for the day
This game is the very first arcade game I played in 1977. I was 6 years old and played it with my uncle at a place called Pit n Pub in Arlington Heights, Illinois which was a family pizza place back then with one long wall with arcades and pinball. This game started my video gaming bug which hasn't stopped. I remember 'Circus' as well.
My first memories of a video game are of this one in the local Woolworth's. I remember watching the attraction mode and the cars re-orienting when the track changed. Never got to play it back then.
AWESOME! If I am not mistaken, this game was the first one I ever dropped a quarter into as a 4 year old at the Sam's Pizzeria in Napa back in 1977... Thank you for sharing. 😁
Had one of these in our game room along with a Tron upright back in 1984. We had the uprights in the corner and the pool table in the middle. I couldn't believe how well the cars responded to the steering wheel. It had really good controls.
Lol, we need more videos with Joe and Ron bantering. Interesting to see that Atari had the power supply on the mainboard early on rather than be modular like the ARs.
Another awesome and educational video 👍 I have a road champion arcade machine I’m going to dig out and try to bring back to life soon. Keep up the good work 👍
Love when you do videos on arcade games like this. I guess it’s because I’m a bigger fan of games like this then I am Pinball machines. Don’t get me wrong, I do enjoy a pinball machine. But spent more time on arcade machines like this. That one you did on Thief was pretty dang cool.
41:43 i was a undefeated supermaster at this game, this track was the fastest, and you really needed to drift the car, superfast spinn of the steering wheel! So funny to see!
I recently (like two months ago) fixed a Sprint 2 (bad RAM with a weird failure mode and a bad cap in the monitor making it sync weird - and it has the same exact deformation in the lower left corner that goes away after a few minutes). I can't decide if this is the most fun game I've ever played or Mario Kart. (also the machine has 1978 date codes on all the chips even though it's a 1976 game) Ha - the CPU in our Night Driver is older - 4776!
This one does the same thing with the bottom corner, takes about 60 seconds to fix itself, and that's after we capped it. I think something has aged :) Thanks for watching as always senilyDeluxe!
This was one of the first arcade games I remember playing, maybe 1978 here in the UK. The arcade had this, Asteroids, Fire Truck and a couple of others including Kee Games' first driving game which may have been called just 'Driver?' It was similar to Sprint but the tracks were complicated and savage, you ended up spinning the wheel like crazy to make the thing turn 180 degrees. Great times :D (*edit* - it was either Gran Trak 10 or one of the clones, that screen is instantly familiar)
That CPU Socket likely was perfectly fine, the way it held the CPU, more likely to damage the CPU removing it... I really wish the made quality like that now. I would pay for quality. We have gone backwards in such a big way in order to make a dollar. As far as capacitors, they only did that for capacity vs size constraints. Parallel increases the capacitance. If they were in series that would be different as the voltage handling is increased in series, but in this situation with them paralleled, you have done exactly what most true techs would do. Saying "a spare one in case one fails" well, that's a bit of crap if anyone says that. Capacitors will usually short when they fail, but even if it went open, the capacitance would decrease and cause issues. Great work as usual. :)
"We gotta close this machine! Two chips have already been claimed! What we have out there is a Great White!" "Roney! Sick vandalism! That is a deliberate mutilation of an arcade cabinet!"
Sprint was, by far, Atari's longest-running series, lasting from Gran Trak 10 and Le Mans through Indy 800 to Sprint 8, 4, 1 and 2, Indy 500 on the Atari VCS/2600, and then in the late 80s Super Sprint, Championship Sprint and Badlands. Lyle Rains was awarded a patent on the AI of the computer drivers in Sprint 2.
Maybe the elvs that where inside broke their way out because they got a dust allergy, great job ron looking forward to see what you do to that busted side panel, Bondo anyone ?
JOES CLASSIC The coin door switch is being monitored and check by the RAM Chip which most other arcade games doesn't use a RAM chip to store the coin door switch, correct me if i'm wrong. The coin switch pulses which gets stored into the RAM chip but it has something to do with the "steering reset circuit" also? the steering reset circuit is being triggered from what is stored on that I/O RAM chip it seems.
1976...first true ruling year of 6502 king. Atari company called it a MPU, placing its ceramic body and golden feet in the crown of gold petals. But, little did they know, that almost fifty years later, two brothers will pick it out with a dental tool as the modern tools was deemed puny and unworthy. ;)
Never saw that one before . Is the super sprint game a Nintendo exclusive or was it also a arcade stand up machine. I think remember seeing that at putt putt golf and games as a kid
@@LyonsArcade I enjoy your video’s and variety of machines you show us. I use to walk 6 miles to play at putt putt golf and games as a kid and spend a few bucks on games. That all changed when I got a NES worked all summer to pay for it. Thanks again for the great content
We have been updating our "Parts" page on our website, with links to a lot of the products we use when we do repairs, check it out at www.LyonsArcade.com/parts.html , we'll see you over there!
Hey Guys,
Joan, Tennyson and I think you're the greatest and they are very smart!
❤️ 💙 💜 💖 💗
Tell Tenny we said hey!
@@LyonsArcade Oh he heard and he's been strutting around wearing sunglasses. Fame is a strong elixir.
Thanks guys, much appreciated. So many brownie bonus points and triple bonus time❤️
Amazing there are still vintage units like this in good operating condition. I remember when they were everywhere. There was an art to spinning those wheels! Lol.
It is a real treat to see you resurrect these great old games! All good wishes.
Wow,,fond memories of these in 70s..they were everywhere,arcades,cross channel ferries,cinema`s airports......Simple but stood the test of time ! Thanks guys for this trip down memory lane ;) x
Thank you for watching Saskia!
This was legit the second video game I ever played, back in '77 or so when I was 8 years old. Very cool to see this!
It's pretty cool :)
Amazing as this was also the second arcade game I ever played! This was around 1980/81 at a UK Pontins camp. The first game I played (in the same arcade) was Night Driver 👍
@@-abacchus My first game was another Kee Games/Atari game (I think) called "Tank II". Both were at a long gone ice cream shop we used to go to when I was little
@@-abacchus Oh my god! Night Driver, I forgot about that one! One of the earliest first-person perspective games, or was it the first? The first game I ever played was pong -- the main issue with pong was you need to find an opponent of a similar skill level to you or it was a blow-out (one way or the other).
I remember playing these a few times on the boat from Sweden to Finland as a kid, i never was big on the arcade machines though since it cost money that i didnt really have. Its funny how i even remember the sound and the oil slicks all these years later even though i didnt play these games much at all.
40 years later and i can still remember the feel of the steering wheels and the shifters.
The one we played the most was on the camping ground close to the local beach, if you played it with wet feets you got electrocuted by the metal accelerator.
That's pretty wild, it does have metal pedals :) Thanks for watching mikgus, we appreciate the comments!
Were these things a campgrounds special? I also played in a campgrounds in Florida.
Now THIS is what i love about your videos. I love when you guys bring stuff back from the dead. That machine is almost at old as i am! Keep it 70s!
Love them old school games from back in the 70's and early 89's. Sure brings back a flood of memories. Keep up the great work.
These are some of my favorites!
Wow! I’ll be 50 this April and I haven’t seen that game since I was a kid!!! Freakin cool!
I'll be 50 in April too! I remember playing this at an arcade at a crappy beach. The beach was nothing, but these games were awesome.
@@OSXMan right on man!!!!
Man I swear! I remember playing this at thee arcade around 1976... One if my favorite games of the time!
I must have dropped a small fortune in quarters or tokens in many of the machines you have brought back to life. It is so good to see them still operating. Many of these were never intended to last more than a few years, yet, decades later they remain. Awesome work and really appreciate the videos.
Thank you for watching A Daily Llama! They are very well built all things considered...
Easily one of my favorite channels on TH-cam. Top 3.
✌️
Thank you Drew, I used to live on the west coast when I was a kid, we were in Fresno, CA right smack dab in the middle of the state!
This game and the vector game Space War were my two early obsessions. Amazing it essentially worked with just reconnecting the coin switch.
Seeing this I remember spinning that steering wheel right and left! So many years ago in a campgrounds in Florida.
Bought a $1k soundbar through your amazon link, hopefully you got a share of that. Love learning through your vids, keep em coming!
I did see that, we mentioned it in one of the videos but I don't remember which one :)
We used to play this back in the day at the skating rink. Good times good times
This might be the very one you played!
Great job joe ! You are the Michael Jordan of arcade repair and restoration ! 5 🌟 stars man 👏
Michael Jordan is the man, I was always a big Magic Johnson fan myself though :)
@@LyonsArcade It was Julius Erving, aka; Dr. J for me.
@@LyonsArcade cool man. You can be magic I’ll be James worthy 🏀
I only ever saw a few of these back in the day. Never played one, they were always broken. Super Sprint was my jam in the mid to late 80's. The 4 player version was awesome.
I hardly ever get those in, but Sprint 2 I've had twice so there's that :)
As soon as Ron turned the camera to the back I start geeking out. Way cool!
I used to love this game!!! So awesome to see you keeping them going!
Thank you for watching Anthony!
I haven't seen one of these in over 40 years. Used to play it a lot when I was a kid at the mall arcade in the late 70's.
Astounded that it worked so well. True wee gem you got there.
Issue with 3D printed parts, is they can fail too easily. We would 3D print a part, make a mould from it, then resin cast a new part from the mould. This tends to be a lot stronger, even more than the original.
Great video, keep'em coming.
Fantastic Video thank you, played this arcade game for hours & hours, very nice to see this in working condition again, cheers
Thank you for watching Vinyledgemaster!!!!
That game looks pretty fun. I like the simple clean graphics on a gray background.
This one takes me back. When I was a teenager in the 70's me and my friend would run a roll of quarters through this game racing each other. Ours was located in a pharmacy.
One of these "adopted" many of my quarters, when I was pretty young. Very playable game.
We had one of these as one of our first games we had in our house, many moons ago
Cool old game, still super fun today!
They had to make it fun because they couldn't make it photorealistic back then. It's all about suspending reality :)
Oh man that Hole, I’m not sure what’s worse having your side painted over like mine or having a hole like yours to repair.
Glad your doing this video it’s great inspiration. Thanks joe 😎👍
I can 100% agree with that atari's schematics are out the chain they are so detailed I always tell people if you buy an Atari game especially in arcade machine make sure you get the manual with it it usually has the schematics in it
It's pretty impressive, the gold standard of schematics!
Loved playing this at my local alley in the 80s
This may have been the exact same cabinet you played!
Wow loved playing this classic back in the day. Best driving game ever produced. So freaking fun sliding around the track. Just spinning the wheels. Had one of these about 8 years ago love it Joe.
First time I've seen a upright racing machine with 2 steering wheels ☝️
They were trying whatever they could :) I have another one called "Street Burners" that has that same type of setup...
@@LyonsArcade my go to games in the 1980s were...Gauntlet, star wars, renegade and ghosts n goblins
Fantastic! I was about 8 when this game came out and we used to visit an arcade at a restaurant called the "Big Bow Wow" in Howard Beach, NY. They had all the coolest video games!
What a great name!
Wow. That coin door fix is the sort of thing you can only learn from experience. I would never have guessed that was the problem.
Love the graphic design on those early Atari cabs.
I'm happy it's gotten to the point where that style is cool again. In the 90's people thought it was really dated, but it has a nice style...
@@LyonsArcade I have the Art of Atari book, they did a poster book as well. Got a few of them mounted in my walls.
Dang! This was a favorite of mine, back in the good ole days. Wish I was there working with you boys. Thanks for sharing.
Come on by Rick!
Man I love this vid. You guys are magicians... Thx
Thank you Lunar Module!
I really like the design and lettering of the cabinet, atari had some great artists in their hayday
Man, I would LOVE to own this game! The old tech is my favorite by far. Great video!
I think I remember playing this one as a kid somewhere. I just downloaded the rom to play it on my PC modded Arcade1up Ridge Racer! I for sure remember the sound effects and such. Very cool and great job on getting another piece of history running again!
Used to have a vending company called Sioux Valley Vending in my home town, they had that game. Played it a bunch at our bowling ally.
That is one SUPER COOL old arcade game! You can tell it wants to work and be Awesome again! I look forward to seeing the rest of the saga. Thanks Ron!
Thank you for watching Kelly! We're gonna get her going :)
I love your videos, and wear my joes arcade tee shirt with pride! Thank you
Thank you Level Means-Flat!
You may have been a glint... but I was 12, and totally remember this game. It wasn't common, but I seem to recall seeing one in the arcades at Cedar Point when I was 12(ish). Arcade games were just magical boxes showing of the technological prowess of the day back then, but it's cool to see the innards today with all the knowledge about this stuff I've acquired over the years, and learn stuff about the hardware, like it running on a 6502, which isn't that big of a news flash. Atari liked the MOS 6502, even the 2600 had a variation of the 6502.
All those early Atari games had 6502's for sure... i'm used to them in Asteroids for instance... thanks for watching John!
I absolutely loved that game when I was a kid!
I reached the point where I would put Mario andretti to shame :-)
It's got a nice vibe to it :)
I am 60 and my first game in the 70's was Pong!
I recently had one of those. Just traded it off a few weeks ago. Fun game.
We like it!
Stunner :) and such a hard game. Brill
one of my all time favorite games, my local grocery store had this in the foyer area. those steering wheels had such a great weight and would spin very nicely(i may be somewhat guilty of some of the wear of the steering wheel), sounds strange maybe but if you know you know.
My 7 year old, Elijah, does an excellent Ron impression. "People! Come on now people!" You're almost as cool as Derick from Vice Grip Garage in his eyes.
Tell Elijah I've been fixing old cars longer than Derick :) I've got a 66 Plymouth Valiant, a 69 Mustang, a 64 Mercury Comet, an 83 Chevy Silverado and an 86 GMC Sierra! Derick's better at it than me though!
I got a good friend who has a 2021 silverado ..beast of a thing costs him 240 bucks a week on average for gas..
@@LyonsArcade he's fixing old cars too. Right now he's in the middle of building an S10 dune buggy, with a little help from dad. There's vids in our channel.
Black and white 27 inch monitor from back in the day
Pretty cool
Even back then a 27 inch TV was a big TV
The 70s, even 80s, if you had more than 1 TV you were doing good
Having a TV in the front room, the bedrooms, with cable boxes and VCRs, you knew you were in the upper middle class
Most people had a 19 inch black and white TV in the front room
I had a 13 inch black and white in the front room
Seeing the first house with a 25 inch color TV in the front room, master bedroom and guest bedroom, and a VCR and cable box with a remote wireless controller, 😳 WOW
Circa 1980.
That was the first year they had ir remote controls
It was amazing
I mean like walking into the future
The house was brand new
Had circuit breakers where I had only seen fuses
A 60 amp single phase 4 fuses
The new house had 50 breakers, 200 amp 240 volt dual phase
So amazing for the day
That's a great engine sound.
love this game..
It's pretty slick!
This game is the very first arcade game I played in 1977. I was 6 years old and played it with my uncle at a place called Pit n Pub in Arlington Heights, Illinois which was a family pizza place back then with one long wall with arcades and pinball. This game started my video gaming bug which hasn't stopped. I remember 'Circus' as well.
I remember playing that as a child. gosh im old!
My first memories of a video game are of this one in the local Woolworth's. I remember watching the attraction mode and the cars re-orienting when the track changed. Never got to play it back then.
AWESOME! If I am not mistaken, this game was the first one I ever dropped a quarter into as a 4 year old at the Sam's Pizzeria in Napa back in 1977... Thank you for sharing. 😁
I remember these in the '80s at the local pizza shops
Had one of these in our game room along with a Tron upright back in 1984. We had the uprights in the corner and the pool table in the middle. I couldn't believe how well the cars responded to the steering wheel. It had really good controls.
People just HAD to pry the coin door open. C'mon people! Great video guys!
Looking forward to seeing the rest of this series. I hope one day someone brings you a 1976 Quiz Show machine.
I've never seen a Quiz Show but maybe!
Not gonna lie, I read the title. Lol!
Great video brother. Great was a cool game.
Lol, we need more videos with Joe and Ron bantering. Interesting to see that Atari had the power supply on the mainboard early on rather than be modular like the ARs.
Another awesome and educational video 👍 I have a road champion arcade machine I’m going to dig out and try to bring back to life soon. Keep up the good work 👍
You can get it going again Craig, jump in there :)
I was never good at this game either, but I always loved the Atari Volcano buttons, I think it is the LED in them that just looks great.
Very cool video.
Happy birthday Ron! I think you and I share the same day.
Happy Birthday Dan!!!!!!
Loved sprint!
This was one of the first actual games we bought many years ago (this same title, not this actual cabinet)
Congrats on getting to this point!
Love when you do videos on arcade games like this. I guess it’s because I’m a bigger fan of games like this then I am Pinball machines. Don’t get me wrong, I do enjoy a pinball machine. But spent more time on arcade machines like this. That one you did on Thief was pretty dang cool.
Looking forward to part 2 of this video.
Haven't watched for while, but great video.
41:43 i was a undefeated supermaster at this game, this track was the fastest, and you really needed to drift the car, superfast spinn of the steering wheel!
So funny to see!
I recently (like two months ago) fixed a Sprint 2 (bad RAM with a weird failure mode and a bad cap in the monitor making it sync weird - and it has the same exact deformation in the lower left corner that goes away after a few minutes). I can't decide if this is the most fun game I've ever played or Mario Kart.
(also the machine has 1978 date codes on all the chips even though it's a 1976 game)
Ha - the CPU in our Night Driver is older - 4776!
This one does the same thing with the bottom corner, takes about 60 seconds to fix itself, and that's after we capped it. I think something has aged :) Thanks for watching as always senilyDeluxe!
This was one of the first arcade games I remember playing, maybe 1978 here in the UK. The arcade had this, Asteroids, Fire Truck and a couple of others including Kee Games' first driving game which may have been called just 'Driver?' It was similar to Sprint but the tracks were complicated and savage, you ended up spinning the wheel like crazy to make the thing turn 180 degrees. Great times :D (*edit* - it was either Gran Trak 10 or one of the clones, that screen is instantly familiar)
That CPU Socket likely was perfectly fine, the way it held the CPU, more likely to damage the CPU removing it... I really wish the made quality like that now. I would pay for quality.
We have gone backwards in such a big way in order to make a dollar.
As far as capacitors, they only did that for capacity vs size constraints. Parallel increases the capacitance. If they were in series that would be different as the voltage handling is increased in series, but in this situation with them paralleled, you have done exactly what most true techs would do. Saying "a spare one in case one fails" well, that's a bit of crap if anyone says that. Capacitors will usually short when they fail, but even if it went open, the capacitance would decrease and cause issues.
Great work as usual. :)
Loved this game growing up! Also had the Atari 2600 version and I put many hours into it.
Hey Ron!!
Hey Jason
wow had no idea there was a precursor 10 years before super sprint. somebody at Atari really had a vision.
There was even one before this ! Thank you for watching Engage!
I remember the old circuit boards with all the chips.
"We gotta close this machine! Two chips have already been claimed! What we have out there is a Great White!"
"Roney! Sick vandalism! That is a deliberate mutilation of an arcade cabinet!"
Wow! I had no idea there were a bunch of different types of video arcade games in 1976. I just thought there was pong and that's it!
When you said you’re but a gleam…in 76. That’s when I, born in 76, realized I’m actually old.
I'm right behind ya man
I remember 1976 - Montreal Olympics. Older!
Sprint was, by far, Atari's longest-running series, lasting from Gran Trak 10 and Le Mans through Indy 800 to Sprint 8, 4, 1 and 2, Indy 500 on the Atari VCS/2600, and then in the late 80s Super Sprint, Championship Sprint and Badlands.
Lyle Rains was awarded a patent on the AI of the computer drivers in Sprint 2.
Maybe the elvs that where inside broke their way out because they got a dust allergy, great job ron looking forward to see what you do to that busted side panel, Bondo anyone ?
LOTS of Bondo!
No, do it right- cut it out and replace it with plywood.
@@douro20 Do you just like to disagree with everything or something? You come across as a jerk
@@LyonsArcade duro20 is getting whipped like a government mule 🏇
@@douro20 Bondo works just as fine
joe i remmber you and you
channel great video well done
JOES CLASSIC The coin door switch is being monitored and check by the RAM Chip which most other arcade games doesn't use a RAM chip to store the coin door switch, correct me if i'm wrong. The coin switch pulses which gets stored into the RAM chip but it has something to do with the "steering reset circuit" also? the steering reset circuit is being triggered from what is stored on that I/O RAM chip it seems.
I'm not sure it's the ram chip, I think it's just the Data lines on the MPU Data bus that are checking it, do you think that's how it's working Wayne?
I played this game in the 90s in Poland in local arcade. I had no idea this game is from '76.
That's cool they were still working it!
1976...first true ruling year of 6502 king. Atari company called it a MPU, placing its ceramic body and golden feet in the crown of gold petals. But, little did they know, that almost fifty years later, two brothers will pick it out with a dental tool as the modern tools was deemed puny and unworthy.
;)
It takes a lot to kill a m7000 they're pretty robust as long as you remember to replace caps
We're gonna cap this one up !
They put two parallel filter caps back in the day to drop the ESR but I have a feeling you know that already lol .
No I didn't know that!
Never saw that one before . Is the super sprint game a Nintendo exclusive or was it also a arcade stand up machine. I think remember seeing that at putt putt golf and games as a kid
They made several, there was Sprint, Sprint 2, Super Sprint, Championship Sprint, and Badlands!
@@LyonsArcade I enjoy your video’s and variety of machines you show us. I use to walk 6 miles to play at putt putt golf and games as a kid and spend a few bucks on games. That all changed when I got a NES worked all summer to pay for it. Thanks again for the great content
Groovy!
Right On!
They don't make 'em like they used to !....cheers.
Those were the days back in the day when I can remember schematics on the backup refrigerator's stove's dishwasher's T v's
Yall take care with that dang Hurricane Ian or whatever its called up there 🌪
I read the title. Had one at my local deli.
This may have been the one, you're not the guy who broke a hole in the side are you???!!!????
@@LyonsArcade Hahaha, not likey mate, unless it came from Australia.
makes me think of Death Race, in an Exity cabinet...
I like how the cars turned to tomestones.
Dead ant dead ant ....? I didn't see any dead ants
I remember playing (in sure another one) this as a child at the skating rink