Pinball Test Fixtures

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1 Introduction

Pinball test fixtures were designed to aid in the testing and repair of circuit boards in pinball machines. These fixtures were originally used by distributors who performed repairs and operators who serviced their own equipment. These fixtures are now commonly utilized by individuals experienced with board repair and who perform repairs frequently for games.

Most test fixtures primarily emulate a pinball machine's lamps, solenoids, displays, switches, and sounds. There are also various test sequences available, plus the ability to perform repetitious tests in order to "burn-in" a board.

The downside to these fixtures is that they are big, bulky, and tend to be rather expensive. In some cases, there is little or no documentation for the fixtures. Sometimes, fixtures were modified to accommodate boards, displays, or features that they were not originally intended to support. There is also little or no documentation on these modifications.

Since these test fixtures are designed to emulate the guts of a pinball machine, some collectors/technicians have built their own test fixtures using the guts of actual pinball machines.

Additionally, there are now various modern diagnostic tools available to help aid with testing components, circuit boards, and performing diagnostics while in-game or on the bench.

2 Test Fixtures

2.1 Bally/Stern (Classic)

Bally took a different approach than most other manufacturers and built four discrete test fixtures for testing individual boards, which are commonly known as "Bally brown box testers".

2.1.1 Bally MPU Test Fixture

This test fixture can test Bally MPUs, however, the helpfulness of this test fixture in troubleshooting many problems is limited.

2.1.2 Bally Lamp Board Test Fixture

This test fixture can test both classic Bally and Stern lamp driver boards. There is supposedly a later modification that can be performed on the test fixture in order to be able to test aux lamp boards.

2.1.3 Bally Solenoid Driver Board Test Fixture

This test fixture can test both classic Bally and Stern solenoid driver boards. It can also test early Bally sound boards, but that may require modifications.

2.1.4 Bally Display Test Fixture

This test fixture can test 6-digit Bally and Stern displays, and can be modified to also test 7-digit displays.

2.1.4.1 7-Digit Modification

Modifying the display test fixture to accommodate 7-digit displays involves adding some jumper wire, making some trace cuts, and couple components.

Parts needed:

  • 30 awg wire
  • 18 awg wire
  • 20kohm 1/4 resistor
  • SPDT switch
  • Heat shrink wire wrap.

First, a couple of modifications will need to be made to the wiring between the .156" board connector and the .156" display connector.

The original .156" board connector. Note the position of the red wire with white bands.


Removed the red wire with the white bands and insert it into the open spot in the connector. Then, add a new wire in the spot from which the red wire was removed.

The modified .156" board connector. Note the position of the red wire with white bands and the new white wire.


On the .156" display connector, add the white wire and a jumper wire between the two pins. Two wires will need to be crimped into one of the pins.

The modified .156" display connector. Note the addition of the white wire and jumper wire.


On the .100" board connector, add two lead wires. These will be connected to the new SPDT switch. A new 1/4" hole can be drilled in the metal plate to add the switch.

The modified .100" board connector. Note the addition of the two wires.
Note the addition of the two wires and switch.
Note the addition of the new switch on the control panel.



Next, on the board, cut the indicated traces, add the resistor, and add the jumper wires. When adding the resistor, be sure to put heat shrink on both leads to make sure those leads don't accidentally make contact with anything they aren't supposed to.


When using the test fixture, flipping the switch to the wrong setting will not cause any damage--it will simply interfere with the display blanking signal depending upon the header pin arrangement of the type/version of the display being tested and what the unused pins on the 6-digit display are tied to. Other than that, there are no ill effects for this modification.

2.1.5 Bally Sound Board Test Fixture

This test fixture is designed to test some Bally boards (-32, -50, -51, Cheap Squeak, and Squawk & Talk sound boards)

2.1.6 Bally 6803 Test Fixture

This is a complete test fixture with switch and lamp matrices and is able to test the 6803 MPU, displays, and sound boards found in Bally 6803 games.

2.1.7 Stern SAM II Test Fixture

This is a complete test fixture with switch and lamp matrices, which can test Stern MPU-100 MPUs, lamp boards, solenoid driver boards, SB-100 sound boards, and 6-digit displays. It can also test comparable Bally lamp boards, solenoid driver boards, and 6-digit displays.

2.1.8 Stern SAM III Test Fixture

This is very similar to the SAM II fixture, and SAM II test fixtures are often relabeled as SAM III test fixtures.

2.1.9 Stern SAM IV Test Fixture

This is a complete test fixture with switch and lamp matrices, which can test Stern MPU-100/MPU-200 MPUs, lamp boards, solenoid driver boards, SB-100/SB-300 sound boards, and 6-digit/7-digit displays. It can also test comparable Bally lamp boards, solenoid driver boards, and 6-digit/7-digit displays. It can also be modified to test some Bally sound boards.

2.2 Gottlieb

2.2.1 System 1 Test Fixture

There were possibly 2 or 3 versions of System 1 Test fixtures, plus a stand-alone "playboard simulator" test box.

The earliest test fixture version had a flat surface for the circuit boards, and a vertical backboard surface for the displays, test buttons, and indicator lamps. Later version(s) of the test fixture were build as a large portable case with a flat surface for all the circuit boards, displays, test buttons, and indicator lamps. It also had a cover for the fixture, and two legs to tilt the fixture at an angle while on a workbench.

The playboard simulator was intended to simulate all the switches, lamps, and coils of a playfield, cabinet, and coin door, which could be connected to a boardset in an existing game or custom fixture. This was a portable box with a grid of buttons and lamps for diagnostics.

2.2.2 System 80 Test Fixture

There were at least two versions of system 80 test fixtures. The earlier test fixture was designed for system 80 & 80A games, while a later test fixture was designed for 80, 80A, and 80B games.

An official modification kit released by Gottlieb was released to upgrade test fixtures in order to be able to test sound/speech boards. The kit included an MA-188 sound & speech power supply, a small wiring harness, A small interconnect harness, a large capacitor, two toggle switches, some hardware, some labels, and installation instructions.

There are at least two booklets of official documentation for the system 80 test fixture. The earliest booklet was just a typewritten packet titled "D. Gottlieb & Co. System 80 Bench Test Fixture", and a later bound booklet (like the official parts catalogs) titled "System 80/80A Bench Test Fixture Operational Procedures".

The test fixtures are operated by a system 80 MPU inside the fixture with special test ROMs installed in it.

2.2.3 System 3 Test Fixture

The Gottlieb System 3 test fixture is unique in that it is the only vintage test fixture that was operated by a desktop computer.

The fixture itself is a portable box with a lamp matrix, speaker, and various system 3 connectors. It carried the official name "Gottlieb P.C. Board Tester".

The fixture came with various wiring harnesses in order to connect the various system 3 boards and displays for testing. There is also a smaller white box, which appears to be equivalent to the metal power box in a system 3 game.

The test box was driven by an ISA based I/O card installed in the computer.

The test fixture was operated by an MS-DOS program with the short name of "PINTEST". The latest known version is 1.21. The software displayed numbered lists of tests that could be run using the software and test fixture, and instructions on what steps were required to prepare for testing specific boards.

The MPU, DMD controller board, and sound boards required special test ROMs to be installed prior to running tests.

A video of a driver board test can be seen on facebook.

2.3 Stern/Data East/Sega

2.4 Williams

2.4.1 System 3-6 Test Fixture

The System 3-6 test fixture can test the MPU, driver board, sound boards, power supply, and displays. It can also be modified to accommodate 7-digit displays, System 7 MPUs and sound boards, and hyperball boards.

2.4.2 System 9-11 Test fixture

The System 9-11 Test fixture can test boards found in System 9-11 games. A common modification is to swap out the P1 and P2 digit displays for alphanumeric displays in order to test System 11 boards.

2.4.3 WPC-89 Test Fixture

There are two main variants of the WPC-89 test fixture. The early variant was designed to test WPC-89 boards with alphanumeric displays. The later WPC-89/WPC-S test fixture was designed to test DMD boards. An add-on module was available to loead test fliptronic boards, named the "fliptronic test board assembly", part number A-15876.

This test fixture does not have a complete lamp and switch matrix.

2.4.4 WPC-95 Test Fixture

The WPC-95 Test fixture can test WPC-95 boards. It has a complete switch and lamp matrix, an improvement over the WPC-89 test fixture.

YT.png A video of this text fixture in operation can be found here.

2.5 Alvin G

2.6 Atari

2.7 Capcom

2.8 GamePlan

2.9 Zaccaria

3 Diagnostic Tools

3.1 Universal/General

3.2 Bally/Stern (Classic)

3.3 Gottlieb

3.3.1 System 1

3.3.2 System 80

3.4 Stern/Data East/Sega

3.5 Williams

3.5.1 System 3-11

3.5.2 WPC

3.6 Alvin G

3.7 Atari

3.8 Capcom

3.9 GamePlan

3.10 Zaccaria

4 Custom/Homebrew/Bench Test Fixtures

4.1 Bally/Stern (Classic)

4.2 Gottlieb

4.3 Stern/Data East/Sega

4.4 Williams

4.5 Alvin G

4.6 Atari

4.7 Capcom

4.8 GamePlan

4.9 Hankin

4.10 Zaccaria