Mame Arcade

March 14, 2011 7:30 pm | arcade jukeboxes pinball

WOW Star Wars Tribute 4 Player 37 LCD Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
WOW Star Wars Tribute 4 Player 37 LCD Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
$3,995.00
Time Remaining: 18d 10h 40m
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WIDEBODY SHOOTING GAME ARCADE CONTROL PANEL MAME
WIDEBODY SHOOTING GAME ARCADE CONTROL PANEL MAME
$29.95
Time Remaining: 6h 46m

MORTAL KOMBAT 3 4 JOYSTICKS JAMMA ARCADE WKS W MAME TM
MORTAL KOMBAT 3 4 JOYSTICKS JAMMA ARCADE WKS W MAME TM
$39.79
Time Remaining: 14d 21h 2m
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ARCADE PUSH BUTTONS BUTTON WKS W MAME TM HAPP JAMMA
ARCADE PUSH BUTTONS BUTTON WKS W MAME TM HAPP JAMMA
$1.59
Time Remaining: 21d 7h 14m
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LED lit Arcade Push Buttons MAME Multicade
LED lit Arcade Push Buttons MAME Multicade
$2.49
Time Remaining: 6h 48m
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Build Arcade Step By Step works with MAME  Best Plans
Build Arcade Step By Step works with MAME Best Plans
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Time Remaining: 2d 1h 44m
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1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
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Time Remaining: 1d 23h 37m
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Xin Mo Arcade to USB controller 2 player MAME Multicade Keyboard Encoder
Xin Mo Arcade to USB controller 2 player MAME Multicade Keyboard Encoder
$24.95
Time Remaining: 23d 4h 44m
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2 Joysticks and 14 Buttons Arcade Multicade MAME Jamma
2 Joysticks and 14 Buttons Arcade Multicade MAME Jamma
$33.95
Time Remaining: 17d 7h 41m
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 10 Hour PC Arcade Project Plans  MAME compatible
10 Hour PC Arcade Project Plans MAME compatible
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Time Remaining: 3d 5h 34m
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Dynamo 25 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet
Dynamo 25 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet
$115.00
Time Remaining: 19d 23h 13m
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Sega 25 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet with JAMMA Harness
Sega 25 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet with JAMMA Harness
$125.00
Time Remaining: 21d 22h 49m
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4 Player Video Arcade Control Panel MAMETM Game Room
4 Player Video Arcade Control Panel MAMETM Game Room
$695.00
Time Remaining: 20d 1h 13m
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NEW HAPP 2 1 4 TRACKBALL ARCADE MAME MULTICADE 60 IN 1
NEW HAPP 2 1 4 TRACKBALL ARCADE MAME MULTICADE 60 IN 1
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Time Remaining: 27d 7h 54m
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2 Player Video Arcade Control Panel MAMETM Game Room
2 Player Video Arcade Control Panel MAMETM Game Room
$595.00
Time Remaining: 27d 9h 26m
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HAPP 14 BUTTONS JOYSTICKS JAMMA ARCADE WKS W MAME TM
HAPP 14 BUTTONS JOYSTICKS JAMMA ARCADE WKS W MAME TM
$39.79
Time Remaining: 8d 9h 14m
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PC MAME PS3 to Arcade Controller USB Interface PCB
PC MAME PS3 to Arcade Controller USB Interface PCB
$27.95
Time Remaining: 8d 8h 25m
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MAME COMPATIBLE PC ARCADE Project Plans FREE Shipping
MAME COMPATIBLE PC ARCADE Project Plans FREE Shipping
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Time Remaining: 3d 5h 34m
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Real Arcade Video Game empty CABINET make a MAME game
Real Arcade Video Game empty CABINET make a MAME game
$99.00
Time Remaining: 26d 23h 28m
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Arcade Game Pinball Door Lock WKS W Mame and Jamma
Arcade Game Pinball Door Lock WKS W Mame and Jamma
$2.75
Time Remaining: 1d 3h 25m
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ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG BLUE BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG BLUE BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
$2.49
Time Remaining: 4d 9h 18m
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Die Hard Arcade JAMMA 25 Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet Great for MAME
Die Hard Arcade JAMMA 25 Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet Great for MAME
$245.00
Time Remaining: 10d 7m
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COMBO 46 Virtual Pinball Table + 4 Player 37 Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
COMBO 46 Virtual Pinball Table + 4 Player 37 Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
$9,995.00
Time Remaining: 7d 9h 16m
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WOW 4 Player 42 LCD Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
WOW 4 Player 42 LCD Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
$4,195.00
Time Remaining: 26d 10h 8m
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LED 2 1 4 Trackball MAME PS2 Arcade Pc Not HAPP
LED 2 1 4 Trackball MAME PS2 Arcade Pc Not HAPP
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Time Remaining: 3d 10h 4m
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KILLER INSTINCT JOYSTICKS JAMMA ARCADE WKS W MAME TM
KILLER INSTINCT JOYSTICKS JAMMA ARCADE WKS W MAME TM
$39.79
Time Remaining: 14d 21h 1m
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TEKKEN STYLE ARCADE CONTROL PANEL MAME
TEKKEN STYLE ARCADE CONTROL PANEL MAME
$39.95
Time Remaining: 6h 46m

Arcade Mame Multi game Multicade Marquee 23x9 MV3 sticR
Arcade Mame Multi game Multicade Marquee 23x9 MV3 sticR
$15.00
Time Remaining: 25d 7h 58m
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ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG YELLOW BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG YELLOW BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
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Time Remaining: 4d 9h 20m
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NEW HAPP ARCADE BUTTONS ANY COLOR OR PLR MAME MULTICADE
NEW HAPP ARCADE BUTTONS ANY COLOR OR PLR MAME MULTICADE
$1.55
Time Remaining: 8d 9h 24m
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Dynamo Simpsons Bowling 27 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet with Trakball
Dynamo Simpsons Bowling 27 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet with Trakball
$165.00
Time Remaining: 29d 23h 35m
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Arcade vga jamma Agp ati 9200 15khz output for mame or neogeo cabinet
Arcade vga jamma Agp ati 9200 15khz output for mame or neogeo cabinet
$32.00
Time Remaining: 18d 22h 19m
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Sega JAMMA 25 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet with Deer Hunting
Sega JAMMA 25 MAME Full Size Arcade Game Cabinet with Deer Hunting
$195.00
Time Remaining: 29d 23h 12m
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20 FT 1 2 INCH Black Arcade Mame T Molding
20 FT 1 2 INCH Black Arcade Mame T Molding
$6.45
Time Remaining: 27d 6h 10m
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Arcade Mame Cabinet Handles
Arcade Mame Cabinet Handles
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Time Remaining: 1d 8h 10m
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33 ARCADE CABINET JAMMA MAME REBUILT SHOWCASE CABINET
33 ARCADE CABINET JAMMA MAME REBUILT SHOWCASE CABINET
$250.00
Time Remaining: 20d 10h 46m
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PC to Jamma Converter adapter Arcade MAME Multicade
PC to Jamma Converter adapter Arcade MAME Multicade
$24.95
Time Remaining: 6h 58m
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HAPP QUARTER 25 CENT COIN MECH ARCADE JAMMA MAME NEW FREE Priority Mail ANY USA
HAPP QUARTER 25 CENT COIN MECH ARCADE JAMMA MAME NEW FREE Priority Mail ANY USA
$16.00
Time Remaining: 22d 8h 42m
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X Arcade Dual Joystick Two Players Great for MAME and Classic Arcade Games
X Arcade Dual Joystick Two Players Great for MAME and Classic Arcade Games
$129.99
Time Remaining: 25d 11h 55m
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Video Arcade Game 2 Player 27 LCD MAMETM Fully Loaded For Your Game Room
Video Arcade Game 2 Player 27 LCD MAMETM Fully Loaded For Your Game Room
$3,695.00
Time Remaining: 2d 10h 27m
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Taito Chase HQ Driving Arcade Game Cabinet Perfect for MAME
Taito Chase HQ Driving Arcade Game Cabinet Perfect for MAME
$165.00
Time Remaining: 14d 3h 50m
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Arcade lit LED pushbutton button Mame Multicade Neo Geo
Arcade lit LED pushbutton button Mame Multicade Neo Geo
$2.50
Time Remaining: 13d 14h 19m
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Donkey Kong 3 Arcade Nintendo Professionally Restored All Original NOT Mame 1983
Donkey Kong 3 Arcade Nintendo Professionally Restored All Original NOT Mame 1983
$799.00
Time Remaining: 6d 23h 51m
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Ultracade JAMMA USBlinx video arcade interface controller board MAME tested good
Ultracade JAMMA USBlinx video arcade interface controller board MAME tested good
$129.00
Time Remaining: 27d 6h 46m
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Plans for the Ultimate Mame Arcade Game Machine Pacman Tron Frogger  More
Plans for the Ultimate Mame Arcade Game Machine Pacman Tron Frogger More
$9.99
Time Remaining: 20d 22h
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1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
$8.85
Time Remaining: 21d 22h 52m
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NEW 19 LCD MONITOR DISPLAY ARCADE GAME CGA EGA VGA MAME CRT Conversion HD
NEW 19 LCD MONITOR DISPLAY ARCADE GAME CGA EGA VGA MAME CRT Conversion HD
$199.99
Time Remaining: 16d 21h 25m
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2 Player 27 LCD Video Arcade Machine MAMETMGame Room
2 Player 27 LCD Video Arcade Machine MAMETMGame Room
$2,995.00
Time Remaining: 7d 9h 16m
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MAME Arcade Game Monitor To LCD Video Converter To VGA
MAME Arcade Game Monitor To LCD Video Converter To VGA
$31.95
Time Remaining: 11d 11h 42m
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ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG GREEN BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG GREEN BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
$2.49
Time Remaining: 4d 9h 16m
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HAPP CONTROLS 3 INCH TRACKBALL MOUNT ARCADE JAMMA MAME
HAPP CONTROLS 3 INCH TRACKBALL MOUNT ARCADE JAMMA MAME
$12.99
Time Remaining: 24d 3h 35m
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3 Imperial Benson Trackball MAME ARCADE PS 2 W Mounting Plateetc
3 Imperial Benson Trackball MAME ARCADE PS 2 W Mounting Plateetc
$13.50 (5 Bids)
Time Remaining: 5d 4h 22m

Sega Turbo Arcade Cabinet project or mame non working
Sega Turbo Arcade Cabinet project or mame non working
$100.00
Time Remaining: 7d 12h 43m
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ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG RED BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG RED BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
$2.49
Time Remaining: 23d 10h 3m
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WOW 4 Player 37 LCD Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
WOW 4 Player 37 LCD Home Video Arcade Game MAMETM
$3,995.00
Time Remaining: 14d 21h 13m
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HAPP ARCADE GAME PLAYER BUTTONS BUTTON WKS MAME TM JAMMA
HAPP ARCADE GAME PLAYER BUTTONS BUTTON WKS MAME TM JAMMA
$2.05
Time Remaining: 23h 19m
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1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
$8.85
Time Remaining: 6d 22h 12m
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1 HAPP SUPER 4 8 WAY JOYSTICK NEW ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
1 HAPP SUPER 4 8 WAY JOYSTICK NEW ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
$8.85
Time Remaining: 14d 23h 55m
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MAME Arcade Controls to USB Adapter
MAME Arcade Controls to USB Adapter
$29.95
Time Remaining: 12d 7h 33m
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HAPP USB game control interface UGCI MAME run arcade controls on a PC Flying
HAPP USB game control interface UGCI MAME run arcade controls on a PC Flying
$9.99 (1 Bid)
Time Remaining: 5d 18h 59m

Chrome Arcade lit LED pushbutton button Mame Multicade
Chrome Arcade lit LED pushbutton button Mame Multicade
$2.75
Time Remaining: 1d 4h 53m
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19 Vision Pro LCD CGA VGA Arcade Monitor MAME Etc
19 Vision Pro LCD CGA VGA Arcade Monitor MAME Etc
$295.00
Time Remaining: 7h 48m
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Super Stand Up Arcade Game Cabinet MAME PC ready
Super Stand Up Arcade Game Cabinet MAME PC ready
$999.00
Time Remaining: 6d 6m
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Custom built MAME tm Arcade cabinet Trackball ++ UTAH
Custom built MAME tm Arcade cabinet Trackball ++ UTAH
$1,649.99
Time Remaining: 2d 6h 28m
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19 ARCADE GAME LCD MONITOR MULTICADE COCKTAIL MAME
19 ARCADE GAME LCD MONITOR MULTICADE COCKTAIL MAME
$199.99
Time Remaining: 22d 20h 39m
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Competitor Arcade Joystick MAME HAPP NEW with microswitches
Competitor Arcade Joystick MAME HAPP NEW with microswitches
$14.00
Time Remaining: 28d 9h 37m
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Sega Saturn Store Display Kiosk Arcade Cabinet Modified for MAME
Sega Saturn Store Display Kiosk Arcade Cabinet Modified for MAME
$1,200.00
Time Remaining: 18d 5h 51m
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Control Panel Plancia Naomi Egret 3 Arcade Cabinet Jamma Bar Arcade Mame
Control Panel Plancia Naomi Egret 3 Arcade Cabinet Jamma Bar Arcade Mame
$86.00
Time Remaining: 4d 22h 54m

Bartop Arcade  Mame
Bartop Arcade Mame
$1,600.00
Time Remaining: 16d 8h 38m
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RED LONG LEGNTH ARCADE PUSH BUTTON ALSO FOR MAME
RED LONG LEGNTH ARCADE PUSH BUTTON ALSO FOR MAME
$1.59
Time Remaining: 21d 6h 52m
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PC Arcade Cabinet Audio Amp Amplifier Cable Mono Stereo Adapter Mame Sound Kit
PC Arcade Cabinet Audio Amp Amplifier Cable Mono Stereo Adapter Mame Sound Kit
$27.99
Time Remaining: 20d 11h
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Arcade lit LED player pushbutton button Mame Multicade
Arcade lit LED player pushbutton button Mame Multicade
$3.00
Time Remaining: 24d 10m
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Cherry E Switch Arcade Push Button Multicade MAME MicroSwitch Micro switch
Cherry E Switch Arcade Push Button Multicade MAME MicroSwitch Micro switch
$1.24
Time Remaining: 1d 1h 18m
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Video arcade control panel overlay Ultracade Mame NEW
Video arcade control panel overlay Ultracade Mame NEW
$6.99
Time Remaining: 15d 7h 41m
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MAME Arcade Machine by XtremeArcades
MAME Arcade Machine by XtremeArcades
$2,400.00
Time Remaining: 6d 8h 9m
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Cocktail Arcade Table Mame
Cocktail Arcade Table Mame
$1,199.00
Time Remaining: 28d 23h 46m
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HAPP ARCADE BUTTONS JOYSTICK WORKS WITH MAME
HAPP ARCADE BUTTONS JOYSTICK WORKS WITH MAME
$19.99
Time Remaining: 7d 10h 9m

New Arcade Game Single Slot Coin Door with 25 cent coin mech Mame Jamma
New Arcade Game Single Slot Coin Door with 25 cent coin mech Mame Jamma
$34.95
Time Remaining: 19d 6h 54m
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Colours Arcade Mame Multicade Pushbutton Buttons New D
Colours Arcade Mame Multicade Pushbutton Buttons New D
$0.99
Time Remaining: 19d 9h 36m
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3 In 1 Arcade Button w Microswitches MAME Jamma Ready
3 In 1 Arcade Button w Microswitches MAME Jamma Ready
$5.95
Time Remaining: 1d 4h 37m
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MAME Arcade Controls to USB Adapter Single player
MAME Arcade Controls to USB Adapter Single player
$20.00
Time Remaining: 8d 19h 47m
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12 Arcade ROUND MAME Button w Translucent Rim Built In Intergrated Microswitch
12 Arcade ROUND MAME Button w Translucent Rim Built In Intergrated Microswitch
$6.98
Time Remaining: 15h 7m
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Arcade American Style Joystick and 8 push buttons kit Multicade MAME Jamma game
Arcade American Style Joystick and 8 push buttons kit Multicade MAME Jamma game
$28.50
Time Remaining: 11d 14h 5m
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Cocktail Table Top Arcade Game Cabinet MAME PC ready
Cocktail Table Top Arcade Game Cabinet MAME PC ready
$899.00
Time Remaining: 6d 10m
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Happ Controls Arcade Black Ultimate 4 Way Joystick NEW MAME PAC MAN GALAGA
Happ Controls Arcade Black Ultimate 4 Way Joystick NEW MAME PAC MAN GALAGA
$0.01
Time Remaining: 9d 1h 58m

Cocktail Arcade game cabinet kit Jamma and MAME Ready LCD Monitor Ready NEW
Cocktail Arcade game cabinet kit Jamma and MAME Ready LCD Monitor Ready NEW
$439.00
Time Remaining: 16d 22h 20m
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ARCADE GAME PINBALL DOOR LOCK WKS W MAME tm JAMMA
ARCADE GAME PINBALL DOOR LOCK WKS W MAME tm JAMMA
$2.94
Time Remaining: 21h 52m
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Bartop Arcade game cabinet kit Jamma and MAME Ready
Bartop Arcade game cabinet kit Jamma and MAME Ready
$289.00
Time Remaining: 16d 22h 19m
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20 FT 5 8 INCH Black Arcade Mame T Molding
20 FT 5 8 INCH Black Arcade Mame T Molding
$6.45
Time Remaining: 25d 19h 25m
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20 FT 3 4 BLACK SMOOTH BRAND NEW T MOLDING ARCADE MAME
20 FT 3 4 BLACK SMOOTH BRAND NEW T MOLDING ARCADE MAME
$9.00
Time Remaining: 16d 20h 54m
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2 Player MAME Pedestal Arcade
2 Player MAME Pedestal Arcade
$2,800.00
Time Remaining: 7d 3h 1m
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Chrome Arcade lit LED player pushbutton w insert Mame
Chrome Arcade lit LED player pushbutton w insert Mame
$3.25
Time Remaining: 1d 5h 12m
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OMNI Stik 4 8 Way adjustable Arcade Joystick for MAME etc
OMNI Stik 4 8 Way adjustable Arcade Joystick for MAME etc
$38.00
Time Remaining: 3d 18h 53m
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VIDEO ARCADE GAME CABINET ONLY MAME
VIDEO ARCADE GAME CABINET ONLY MAME
$193.33
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Arcade Multicade Multi Game JAMMA MAME Side Art sideart only MV4
Arcade Multicade Multi Game JAMMA MAME Side Art sideart only MV4
$50.00
Time Remaining: 9d 5h 33m
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Arcade Jamma Multicade Mame Marquee 23x9 MV2 StickerBac
Arcade Jamma Multicade Mame Marquee 23x9 MV2 StickerBac
$15.00
Time Remaining: 23d 5m
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1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
1 HAPP COMPETITION 8 WAY JOYSTICK ARCADE JAMMA MAME tm
$8.85
Time Remaining: 6d 22h 27m
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ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG WHITE BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
ARCADE LIGHTED LED LONG WHITE BUTTON MAME MULTICADE
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MAME Arcade Game Control Panel with Software  Warranty
MAME Arcade Game Control Panel with Software Warranty
$129.00
Time Remaining: 1d 23h 7m
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MAME Arcade PS2 Pc Trackball with illuminated ball for MAME arcade
MAME Arcade PS2 Pc Trackball with illuminated ball for MAME arcade
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Time Remaining: 16d 1h 44m
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Mame Arcade
Mame Arcade

Mechanical Television

Mechanical television in history

The mechanical part usually consists of a Nipkow disk, which has a series of holes in a spiral pattern. In the camera, the disk has a light-detecting device, usually a photoelectric cell, behind it. In the reproducer (the display), a modulated light source, usually a neon tube, replaces the light detector. As each hole flies by, it produces a scan line. An AM radio wave or closed circuit carries the scan line to the reproducer.

Block diagram of mechanical scan television system.

Facsimile transmission of still photographs first employed mechanical television principles in the 1800s. For instance, Shelford Bidwell demonstrated such a system in 1881. For decades, earlier systems had pioneered scanning in the transmission of type and line art. Photographic transmission was a greater challenge. The selenium in early photoelectric cells had very low sensitivity. Scanning a photograph at a resolution suitable for newspaper reproduction could take several minutes. With silhouette or duotone still images, instantaneous transmission was possible by 1909.

Baird-like modern televisor image of replica "Stooky Bill" puppet head similar to the one used by J L Baird in his early TV experiments. His images would probably have been of comparable quality.

In the 1920s, the Japanese electrical scientist Yasujiro Niwa invented a simple device for phototelegraphic transmission through cable and later via radio. American inventor Charles Francis Jenkins developed mechanical television systems in the 1920s and early 1930s. In 1923, Jenkins transmitted the first moving silhouette images, and on June 13, 1925 publicly demonstrated synchronized transmission of images and sound.

Mechanical television transmitting a live, moving image in tone gradations (grayscale images) was demonstrated by British inventor John Logie Baird on January 26, 1926, at his laboratory in London. Unlike later electronic systems with several hundred lines of resolution, Baird's vertically scanned image, using a scanning disk embedded with a double spiral of lenses, had only 30 lines, just enough to reproduce a recognizable human face.

Because only a limited number of holes could be made in the disks, and disks beyond a certain diameter became impractical, image resolution on mechanical television broadcasts was typically very low, ranging from about 30 lines up to 120 or so. A few systems ranging into the 200-line region also went on the air. Two of these were the 180-line system that Compagnie des Compteurs (CDC) installed in Paris in 1935, and the 180-line system that Peck Television started in 1935 at station VE9AK in Montreal.

Instead of a Nipkow disk, mechanical television can use several other technologies. Other arrangements often made use of a rotating drum, either with holes or with a series of mirrors on it.

Flying spot scanners

Another scanning method was the "flying spot." The flying spot developed as a remedy for the low sensitivity that photoelectric cells had at the time. A bright, narrow beam of light would shine through the holes of a Nipkow disk. This light would then illuminate the television subject, standing in a darkened studio.

Whipping back and forth and up and down, the spot of light would complete sixteen or more scans per second. The light would reflect back to not one, but a bank of photoelectric cells. The combined signals of these cells gave a strong picture. Like mechanical television itself, flying spot technology grew out of phototelegraphy (facsimile). This scanning method began in the 1800s.

The BBC television service used the flying spot method until 1935. German television used flying spot methods as late as 1938. This year was by far not the end of flying spot scanner technology. The German inventor Manfred von Ardenne designed a flying spot scanner with a CRT as the light source. In the 1950s, DuMont marketed Vitascan, an entire flying-spot color studio system. Today, graphic scanners still use this scanning method. The flying spot method has two disadvantages:

Actors must perform in near darkness;

Flying spot cameras tend to work unreliably outdoors in daylight.

A note about outdoor telecasts with a flying spot scanner: In 1928, Ray Kell from the United States' General Electric proved that flying spot scanners could work outdoors. The scanning light source must be brighter than other incident illumination.

Kell was the engineer who ran a 24-line camera that telecast pictures of New York governor Al Smith. Smith was accepting the Democratic nomination for presidency. As Smith stood outside the capital in Albany, Kell managed to send usable pictures to his associate Bedford at station WGY, which was broadcasting Smith's speech. The rehearsal went well, but then the real event began. The newsreel cameramen switched on their floodlights.

Unfortunately for Kell, his scanner only had a 1 kW lamp inside it. The floodlights threw much more light on Governor Smith. These floods simply overwhelmed Kell's image. In fact, the floods made the unscanned part of the image as bright as the scanned part. Kell's photocells couldn't pick up reflections off Smith from the AC scanning beam. Instead, the photocells only detected the flat, DC light from the floodlamps.

The effect is very similar to extreme overexposure in a still camera: The scene disappears, and the camera records a flat, bright light. Use the camera in favorable conditions, though, and the picture comes out fine. Similarly, Kell proved that outdoors in favorable conditions, his scanner worked fine.

Mechanical television with large pictures

A few mechanical TV systems could produce images several feet wide and of comparable quality to the cathode ray tube (CRT) televisions that were to follow. CRT technology at that time was limited to small, low-brightness screens.

Perhaps the best mechanical televisions of the 1930s used the Scophony system, which could produce images of more than 400 lines and display them on screens at least 912 feet (2.83.7 m) in size (at least a few models of this type were actually produced).

The Scophony system used multiple drums rotating at fairly high speed to create the images. One using a 441-line American standard of the day had a small drum rotating at 39,690 rpm (a second slower drum moved at just a few hundred rpm). Today, DLP mechanical TV technology from Texas Instruments far outstrips the capabilities of the Scophony system.

Aspect ratios for different purposes

Some mechanical equipment scanned lines vertically rather than horizontally, as in modern TVs. An example of this method is the Baird 30-line system. Baird's British system created a picture in the shape of a very narrow, vertical rectangle.

This shape created a portrait image, instead of the landscape orientation that is common today. The position of a framing mask before the Nipkow disk determines the scan line orientation. Placement of the framing mask at the left or right side of the disk gives vertical scan lines. Placement at the top or bottom of the disk gives horizontal scan lines.

Baird's earliest television images had very low definition. These images could only show one person clearly. For this reason, a vertical, portrait image made more sense to Baird than a horizontal, landscape image. Baird chose a shape three units wide by seven high. Actually this shape is only about half as wide as a traditional portrait. You can imagine this shape this way: A typical doorway also has the proportions three by seven.

Instead of entertainment television, Baird might have had point-to-point communication in mind. Another television system followed that reasoning. The 1927 system developed by Herbert E. Ives at AT&T's Bell Laboratories was a large-screen television system and the most advanced television of its day. The Ives 50-line system also produced a vertical "portrait" picture. Since AT&T intended to use television for telephony, the vertical shape was logical: phone calls are usually conversations between just two people. A picturephone system would depict one person on each side of the line.

Meanwhile, in the US, Germany and elsewhere, other inventors planned to use television for entertainment purposes. These inventors began with square or landscape pictures. (For example, consider the television systems of these men: Ernst Alexanderson, Frank Conrad, Charles Francis Jenkins, William Peck and Ulises Armand Sanabria.) These inventors realized that television is about relationships between people. From the very beginning, these inventors allowed picture space for two-shots. Soon, images increased to 60 lines or more. The camera could easily photograph several people at once. Then even Baird switched his picture mask to a horizontal image. Baird's "zone television" is an early example of rethinking his extremely narrow screen format. For entertainment and most other purposes, even today, landscape remains the more practical shape.

Rise of electronic television

The advancement of all-electronic television (including image dissectors and other camera tubes and cathode ray tubes for the reproducer) marked the beginning of the end for mechanical systems as the dominant form of television. Mechanical TV usually only produced small images. It was the main type of TV until the 1930s.

All-electronic television, first demonstrated publicly by Philo Farnsworth in 1934, and first used for broadcasting in 1936, was quickly advancing past this point, reaching 400 to more than 600 lines with fast field scan rates in the next few decades. The last mechanical television broadcasts ended in 1939 at stations run by a handful of public universities in the United States. In 1939, RCA paid Farnsworth $1 million for his patents after ten years of litigation, and RCA began demonstrating all-electronic television at the 1939 World's Fair in New York City.

Color mechanical television

Modern colour televisor. A test card can just be seen through the lens on the right.

Mechanical television returned to the United States as a method of painting colors over a monochrome CRT. The CBS color television system of Peter Goldmark used such technology in 1940. John Baird's 1928 color television experiments had inspired Goldmark's more advanced field-sequential color system. In Goldmark's system, stations transmit color saturation values electronically. Yet mechanical methods also come into play. At the transmitting camera, a mechanical disc filters hues (colors) from reflected studio lighting. At the receiver, a synchronized disc paints the same hues over the CRT. As the viewer watches pictures through the color disc, the pictures appear in full color.

Of course, simultaneous color systems superseded the CBS-Goldmark system. Yet mechanical color methods continued to find uses. Early color sets were very expensive, over $1,000 in the money of the time. Inexpensive adapters allowed owners of black-and-white, NTSC television sets to receive color telecasts. The most prominent of these adapters is Col-R-Tel, a 1955 NTSC to field-sequential converter. This system operates at NTSC scanning rates, but uses a disc like the obsolete CBS system had. The disc converts the black-and-white set to a field-sequential set. Meanwhile, Col-R-Tel electronics recover NTSC color signals and sequence them for disc reproduction. The electronics also synchronize the disc to the NTSC system. In Col-R-Tel, the electronics provide the saturation values (chroma). These electronics cause chroma values to superimpose over brightness (luminance)changes of the picture. The disc paints the hues (color) over the picture.

A few years after Col-R-Tel, Apollo moon missions also adopted field-sequential techniques. The lunar color cameras all had color wheels. These Westinghouse and later RCA cameras sent field-sequential color television pictures to earth. The earth receiving stations included mechanical equipment that converted these pictures to standard television formats.

Today, some DLP projectors still use color filter wheels.

Recording

In the days of commercial mechanical television transmissions, a system of recording images (but not sound) was developed, using a modified gramophone recorder. Marketed as "Phonovision", this system, which was never fully perfected, proved to be complicated to use as well as quite expensive, yet managed to preserve a number of early broadcast images that would normally have been lost. Scottish computer engineer Donald F. McLean has painstakingly reconstructed the analogue playback technology required to view these recordings, and has given lectures and presentations on his collection of mechanical television recordings made between 1925 and 1933.

Among the discs in Dr. McLean's collection are a number of test recordings made by television pioneer John Logie Baird himself. One disc, dated "28th March 1928" and marked with the title "Miss Pounsford", shows several minutes of a woman's face in what appears to be very animated conversation. In 1993, the woman was identified by relatives as Mabel Pounsford, and her brief appearance on the disc is one of the earliest known video recordings of a human being.

Recent uses of mechanical television

Since the 1970s, some amateur radio enthusiasts have experimented with mechanical systems. The early light source of a neon lamp has now been replaced with super-bright LEDs. There is some interest in creating these systems for narrow-bandwidth television, which would allow a small moving image to fit into a channel less than 40 kHz wide (modern TV systems usually have a channel about 6 MHz wide, 150 times larger). Also associated with this is slow-scan TV, although that typically uses electronic systems.

The re-emergence of mechanical TV techniques

Today, a mechanical system of a sort has seen moderate popularity. DLP (Digital Light Processing) projectors use an array of tiny (16 m) electrostatically-actuated mirrors selectively reflecting a light source to create an image. Many low-end DLP systems also use a color wheel to provide a sequential color image, a common feature of many early color television systems before the shadow mask CRT provided a practical method for producing a simultaneous color image.

Another place where high-quality imagery is produced by opto-mechanics is the laser printer, where a small rotating mirror is used to deflect a modulated laser beam in one axis while the motion of the photoconductor provides the motion in the other axis. A modification of such a system using high power lasers is used in laser video projectors, with resolutions as high as 1024 lines and each line containing >1500 points. Such systems produce, arguably, the best quality video images. They are used, for instance, in planetariums.

The closest modern systems to the original mechanical scan camera is the long wave infrared cameras used in military applications such as giving fighter pilots night vision. These cameras use a high sensitivity infrared photo receptor (usually cooled to increase sensitivity), but instead of disks of lenses, these systems use rotating prisms to provide a 525 or 625 line standard video output. The optical parts are made from germanium as glass is opaque at the wavelengths involved. These cameras have found a new role in sporting events where they are able to show (for example) where a ball has struck a bat.

Laser lighting display techniques are combined with computer emulation in the LaserMAME[dead link] project. It is a vector-based system, unlike the raster displays thus-far described. Laser light reflected off of computer-controlled mirrors is used to trace out images generated by classic arcade software which is executed by a specially modified version of the MAME emulation software.

References

^ "VE9AK entry at". Earlytelevision.org. http://www.earlytelevision.org/ve9ak.html. Retrieved 2010-03-02. 

^ Media quotations.

^ "Ulises Armand Sanabria at Early Television website". Earlytelevision.org. http://www.earlytelevision.org/u_a_sanabria.html. Retrieved 2010-03-02. 

^ CBS Field Sequential Color System.

^ The Smith, Kline & French Medical Color TV Unit.

^ Hawes Mechanical Television Archive, How Col-R-Tel Works.

^ The World's Earliest Television Recordings.

^ Phonovision: The Recovered Images.

External links

Technical information on mechanical television systems

Mechanical Television & Illusion Generators

Hawes Mechanical Television Archive

Early Television Foundation and Museum

List of Mechanical Television Stations in the US and Canada 1928-1939

Scophony System

The World's Earliest Television Recordings - Restored!

Field-sequential, color television on moon missions

LaserMAME - Mechanically-scanned, giant versions of vector-based arcade games[dead link]

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Broadcast video formats

 

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Digital cinema

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Technical issues

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Categories: Television technology | History of television | VideotelephonyHidden categories: All articles with dead external links | Articles with dead external links from September 2009
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Can I make an Arcade Machine Play MAME ROMs?

I am buying a Street Fighter II arcade machine and can I make it play my MAME ROMs?

Short Answer is NO.

I assuming you are just talking about the the roms being able to be copied onto the SFII roms and being able to play using the games board as a cpu. MAME and the roms work together and your best bet is to use a PC and modify the cabinet to use it.

World's Smallest Playable Donkey Kong / Mame Arcade Cab Pt.1

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