Atari2600.com Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 I recenlty acquired a collection of Atari 2600 games on Printed Circuit Boards (PCB). I could use some help identifying what these are, and or where they possibly came from. There is a story attached. I purchased them from the orignal owner. He told me a relative of his had access to Atari 2600 games before they were released. These are the actual games he received in advance of the game's official release. The collection includes games from several companies including Activision, Apollo, Atari, Coleco, Imagic, Parker Bros., Spectravision and Telesys. All games are released titles. Here are two pictures showing the front and back of the River Raid PCB with two socket EPROM chips. There is no identifying information on the PCB. Here are some thoughts. The owner I purchased them from was legitimate and very unlikely to fabricate a story. The 16K games, like River Raid, are coded onto two 8K EPROMS not a single 16K chip. Whoever made these must have access to the development environment as a dumped producton River Raid cartridge would produce a single 16K binary file which would then require a single 16K EPROM chip. The components appear to have been hand soldered to the PCB. I've not dumped the games and no way to do so. All games seem to be final versions through my limited game play/testing. JC Atari2600.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoundGammon Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 ...if memory serves, I believe the "2716" is a 2K size chip...River Raid was a 4k game, so the 2 chips together added to 4k... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tempest Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 Interesting looking carts, but they're definitely just someones personal pirate copies. I've never seen a board like that though, maybe they worked in an electronics business or something like that where they could get parts easily? 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BioForceApe Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 I recenlty acquired a collection of Atari 2600 games on Printed Circuit Boards (PCB). I could use some help identifying what these are, and or where they possibly came from. There is a story attached. I purchased them from the orignal owner. He told me a relative of his had access to Atari 2600 games before they were released. These are the actual games he received in advance of the game's official release. The collection includes games from several companies including Activision, Apollo, Atari, Coleco, Imagic, Parker Bros., Spectravision and Telesys. All games are released titles. Here are two pictures showing the front and back of the River Raid PCB with two socket EPROM chips. There is no identifying information on the PCB. Here are some thoughts. The owner I purchased them from was legitimate and very unlikely to fabricate a story. The 16K games, like River Raid, are coded onto two 8K EPROMS not a single 16K chip. Whoever made these must have access to the development environment as a dumped producton River Raid cartridge would produce a single 16K binary file which would then require a single 16K EPROM chip. The components appear to have been hand soldered to the PCB. I've not dumped the games and no way to do so. All games seem to be final versions through my limited game play/testing. JC Atari2600.com Hmph, probably the final version with some code differences. XD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mayhem Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 Looks like similar boards to those used for the Magicard... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CPUWIZ Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 That is a development board with 2 x 2K chips on it, very rare IMHO. That is not a garage item, it's silk-screened. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce Tomlin Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 That is a development board with 2 x 2K chips on it, very rare IMHO. That is not a garage item, it's silk-screened. I think you mean solder mask, not silkscreen. Silkscreen is the white ink printing. Solder mask is the green stuff that is set up to avoid the pads. And it would have been a lot of extra work for someone to create a solder mask layer. It's definitely not a chem-dip homebrew board, but that doesn't make it an actual proto, unless you've seen others just like it before. It looks like it was made by someone with access to professional board fabrication, but sawing the diagonal edges seems to have been done by hand. It looks like there may be some kind of numbers at the top edge, but they are unreadable in that photo. I don't have any reason to believe that is an actual proto from what can be seen in the picture. It's just a slightly better made than usual EPROM board. And I think it looks kind of ugly, too, being way taller than it needs to be. If it is genuine, then my lack of seeing other boards like it keeps me from saying so. As for looking "similar" to another kind of board, this is from the era of paste-up layout. The actual details of those curves would be like a fingerprint to identify the master layout from a different one. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CPUWIZ Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 Dude, it's silk-screened, I am not talking about the solder mask (which is another thing that ain't gonna happen in your garage, especially at that time). EDIT: Perhaps I am just imagining the "24" on the PCB. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bruce Tomlin Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 I don't see any silkscreen on it. What I do see is text in the copper layer, such as that "24". (Notice how the text is the same color as the solder mask?) All you have to do to get that is paste the appropriate decals into the copper layer master image when you send it off to be manufactured. Silkscreen text would be a much purer white color. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CPUWIZ Posted April 21, 2012 Share Posted April 21, 2012 Yeah, I suppose it could be the copper layer, either way, this is not a garage job. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Supergun Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 I agree that at least the board shown in these pics most closely resembles a CommaVid board. Do all of the games you acquired look the same, as in are they all on these long boards? If so, it could have simply been a "lot" or a "box" of bare commavid boards that a previous owner found and used as test carts for playing or fooling around. I myself get beat up comma vid carts when i can as some of them have eproms inside and can be used to make nice rush hour or frog demo carts. (and magic card / video life repros as well if you are so inclined and don't mind the labor) I don't think these are "real" and I don't think these are "fake". I think they just are what they are. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CPUWIZ Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 I agree that at least the board shown in these pics most closely resembles a CommaVid board. Do all of the games you acquired look the same, as in are they all on these long boards? If so, it could have simply been a "lot" or a "box" of bare commavid boards that a previous owner found and used as test carts for playing or fooling around. I myself get beat up comma vid carts when i can as some of them have eproms inside and can be used to make nice rush hour or frog demo carts. (and magic card / video life repros as well if you are so inclined and don't mind the labor) I don't think these are "real" and I don't think these are "fake". I think they just are what they are. Wow, a lot of armchair experts around these days, this board is not even close to a CommaVid board, aside it being a long PCB. There are 3 long board CommaVid PCB's, VL, MC and CS, CS is a 2K PCB with only one EPROM on it and the other two contain RAM etc., not even close. MOM, CW, ROD and SH are short 4K PCB's, with one chip each. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Supergun Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 Yes, your right, it is not a commavid board. I never said it was. I said it was "like" a commavid board. The commavid long boards have right angle edges near the cart connector, while these are angled. In regards to comma vid carts, your either mistaken or you have simply not had as good luck. Yes, CS is 2K, and as such has limited applications. (could not be used as a donor for a rush hour cartridge for example) However, I have a 4K commavid long board. (not the kind from VL or MC which have the extra logic) Rest assured, it does exist and I can provide a pic if you like. Lastly, by NO MEANS do I claim to be an expert. I was offering an opinion. Similar to yours I might add. That it was not "garage made". That it was of better quality then the average hacker / bootleg crap you normally found back in the day as well as today. Not saying it is real either, just that it is well made. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shawn Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 There is a mark on this PCB from which I can clearly tell which fab house made it. I'm not letting on what it is though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SoulBlazer Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 What's a fab house, and that does support what the OP was saying? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shawn Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 (edited) What's a fab house, and that does support what the OP was saying? Fabrication House. As in a place that has big ass machines that produce PCB's. This PCB was made in a factory not a garage. There is no doubt about it. EDIT: Here is your hint to help you find out where these board was made. See the circle? Well there are 2 other letters that go next to it which are missing do to the cut line of the PCB. Back when it was still a sheet of pcbs you would have been able to read the 3 letters clearly as the letters are in the sheet before it gets etched and milled. Edited April 22, 2012 by Shawn Sr. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wickeycolumbus Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 That is a development board with 2 x 2K chips on it, very rare IMHO. That is not a garage item, it's silk-screened. Not sure how you call this a rare development board, and then stuff like this pirate garbage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CPUWIZ Posted April 22, 2012 Share Posted April 22, 2012 Yes, your right, it is not a commavid board. I never said it was. I said it was "like" a commavid board. The commavid long boards have right angle edges near the cart connector, while these are angled. In regards to comma vid carts, your either mistaken or you have simply not had as good luck. Yes, CS is 2K, and as such has limited applications. (could not be used as a donor for a rush hour cartridge for example) However, I have a 4K commavid long board. (not the kind from VL or MC which have the extra logic) Rest assured, it does exist and I can provide a pic if you like. Lastly, by NO MEANS do I claim to be an expert. I was offering an opinion. Similar to yours I might add. That it was not "garage made". That it was of better quality then the average hacker / bootleg crap you normally found back in the day as well as today. Not saying it is real either, just that it is well made. I'd love to see that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Atari2600.com Posted April 23, 2012 Author Share Posted April 23, 2012 What's a fab house, and that does support what the OP was saying? Fabrication House. As in a place that has big ass machines that produce PCB's. This PCB was made in a factory not a garage. There is no doubt about it. EDIT: Here is your hint to help you find out where these board was made. See the circle? Well there are 2 other letters that go next to it which are missing do to the cut line of the PCB. Back when it was still a sheet of pcbs you would have been able to read the 3 letters clearly as the letters are in the sheet before it gets etched and milled. Here is a pict showing the complete letter in the area you circled. This letter is repeated and often often incomplete. I did not find two additional letters on these PCBs. I'd guess it's a sylized capital letter J? So what's the board house that made these? JC Atari2600.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shawn Posted April 24, 2012 Share Posted April 24, 2012 (edited) So what's the board house that made these? JC Atari2600.com It's not the same mfg I thought it was. I didn't have my glasses on and thought it was a K not a J. I was thinking of "OAK" and those boards wher made by Oak Mitsui Technologies who had factory's in both Texas and Indiana back when atari pcb's where being made. If it had been an OAK board and if it was made in the USA that is. Edited April 24, 2012 by Shawn Sr. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bennybingo Posted April 24, 2012 Share Posted April 24, 2012 So what's the board house that made these? JC Atari2600.com It's not the same mfg I thought it was. I didn't have my glasses on and thought it was a K not a J. I was thinking of "OAK" and those boards wher made by Oak Mitsui Technologies who had factory's in both Texas and Indiana back when atari pcb's where being made. If it had been an OAK board and if it was made in the USA that is. and the plot thickens.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Supergun Posted April 25, 2012 Share Posted April 25, 2012 I'd love to see that. Ask and you shall receive: And up close: Regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CPUWIZ Posted April 25, 2012 Share Posted April 25, 2012 Wow, thanks, I have never seen that third board before and I have opened probably 30-40 of these. Was it NTSC or PAL? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Supergun Posted April 26, 2012 Share Posted April 26, 2012 It was NTSC. All of the examples pictured here were. I may actually have 2 or 3 more carts with those boards inside, but it may take me some time to locate them and verify. If I find them, I will PM you for a possible trade. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bergum Posted November 11, 2012 Share Posted November 11, 2012 Got any pictures of the other prototypes? It's suprising how many Activision prototypes showed up recently. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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