goatboy wrote:+1monouchi wrote:For me, a big part is the hunt.
when i hear that saying ,all i can think about is that knob head in "chasing classic cars"

goatboy wrote:+1monouchi wrote:For me, a big part is the hunt.
This sounds awesome.Ex_Mosquito wrote:Monouchi: You havnt played a Groovymame+CRT_Emudrivers set-up then? It's a totally different beast from your usual laggy screen tearing Mame experience.I have a few pcb's left and if I was playing Daimakaimura and I were to go out of the room and someone swapped it over to GrovvyMame I honestly wouldn't t tell the difference. It's that good. And I can complete the game with 1-life, so I can spot differences pretty easily if there were any difference in performance. Its a beautiful thing!
I used to have a setup like this. Basically I only played SSF2X and a rotation of five or so "simple" games like Flicky, Pooyan, City Connection, etc.TadCool wrote: A small but meaningful selection of roms can be a good idea too. Choose your top ten and stick to it. If you want to add a game, other must go.
I think of my groovy set-up as a library, but for the games that you really love, you should go for the real thingmonouchi wrote: pcb = flip the power switch and its on!![]()
(Yes, booting/loading is something I am too old for..)
Where did you get a 6 board one from mate?o1s1n wrote:Anyone else try those multi PCB board thingys? (not the ones with games, just with multi jamma slots)
I've one at the moment that supports 6 boards and I'm really enjoying it. Nice balance between using original boards and having a bit of a selection before you've to climb into the cab.
The only thing is that you really do need extension harnesses to set it up properly. I've an Ibara PCB and a 60 in 1 vertical classics straight into it, but everything else is too big (and far too precarious!) to have free standing. So I'm mounting to the cab inner mounting board things and running extension harnesses.
The problem with multi jamma boards is you need games with a similar video resolution and settings.o1s1n wrote:Anyone else try those multi PCB board thingys?
Sexy stuffcools wrote:Yeah, my Pony has a "Fourplay" one fitted.
I bought my one from this guy on ebay in France. Looks to have one listed at the momentcRacKh0rN wrote:
Where did you get a 6 board one from mate?
I've just been using mine for 15k games, so it works grand for that. Thinking about getting another one for my horizontal cab. The only issue there though is that the radio controller works on the same frequency for all these multi boards. So if you have both machines running at once and decide to select a different game in one of them, the game will change in bothLorisBiaggi wrote: The problem with multi jamma boards is you need games with a similar video resolution and settings.
I use a 6 slot multijamma to play 4 system10 games (mr.driller2, gamshara...) and a Blood Warrior which have the same settings.
I used a dual jamma too, the one that turns on both boards and you can switch between them, but i'm not a fan..
Definitely. The boards that lack relays must put a huge strain on the PSU. I would never get one without them.o1s1n wrote: It powers on one board at a time. I rather than to be honest, the other ones I've seen have all boards powered simultaneously. Sure, it avoids board boot up times, but it requires a hell of a lot more power to do so.
Do you have a test button in your Pony?cools wrote: The only downside is that it doesn't pass through the test button...
I keep meaning to add one myself. I was thinking of finding a small button and fitting it under the credit button.cools wrote:I fitted one, just a momentary switch soldered to the back of the JAMMA connector.