![]() Raw Thrills has achieved many accolades and awards from the entertainment industry, including the Best of Show Award (BOSA) 2015 award for Jurassic Park Arcade™, and Play Meter 2015 Players Choice award for Big Buck HD™. The combined strength of the two studios have produced an amazing lineup of games for 2015 including Batman™, SnoCross™, Super Cars™, SuperBikes 2™, Barrel of Monkeys™, Kung Fu Panda™, Aliens Armageddon™, and the incredible new Big Buck HD Wild™ and Jurassic Park Arcade™. Founded in 1995 by George Petro, a former designer for Midway Games, the Play Mechanix design team are the creators of the famed Big Buck Hunter™ series, Deal or No Deal™, Wheel of Fortune™, Terminator Salvation™, Aliens Armageddon™ and many others. to create a new world leader in arcade video and video redemption games. In 2006, Raw Thrills merged with the renowned game development studio Play Mechanix, Inc. From its debut hit The Fast and the Furious™, to the 2015 release Jurassic Park Arcade™, Raw Thrills strives to bring the player the ultimate arcade experience, while delivering consistent reliability and value. The studio is led by veteran game designer Eugene Jarvis, whose credits include classic titles such as Defender™, Robotron:2084™, and the Cruis’n™ series of adventure driving games. was founded in 2001 to develop the finest arcade video game entertainment. They also violated the recommended xtal layout from the datasheet by routing the traces underneath the chip, even though it specifically states not to. and should be <45k ohm ESR (the ST3215SB is <70k ohm). According to the DS1307 datasheet, the chip is designed for a 12.5pF xtal, not a 7pF. The K=ID, 310=date code, C=7pF load capacitance, D=management code. The marking on mine is K310CD, which is likely a Kyocera ST3215SB 32.768KHz xtal. in which case those without the battery/RTC would have to set it at startup, but that could explain the poor timekeeping, and the firmware would be identical (and maybe resetting would set the clock to accurate time again).Īnother possibility for mine is that it looks like they used the wrong xtal. I wonder if it uses the RTC at boot, and then the atmega keeps its own time while powered up. So, it looks like there are at least two revisions. It's also got the components for the speaker populated, though I hooked up a speaker, and nothing seems to come out. So I set the time, then unplugged it for a couple minutes, and saw that it actually kept time.įiguring that there's no way that could happen without a battery backed RTC, I popped mine open, and yep. ![]() I noticed when I plugged it in that the time, while wrong, wasn't 12:00 or some other default looking time. this thread inspired me to unbox the Pac Man clock again and find a place for it in the arcade.
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