Difference between revisions of "JAMMA"

From BYOAC OLD Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (typo)
m
Line 9: Line 9:
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
The easiest way to connect a PC to an arcade cabinet that is JAMMA ready is to use a [[J-PAC]] keyboard encoder (by Ultimarc).
 
The easiest way to connect a PC to an arcade cabinet that is JAMMA ready is to use a [[J-PAC]] keyboard encoder (by Ultimarc).
 
+
<br clear=left>
 
+
==External links==
'''Relevant links:'''<br>
+
*[http://homearcade.org/BBBB/jh.html What To Do With Your JAMMA Harness by Bob Roberts]
[http://homearcade.org/BBBB/jh.html| What To Do With Your JAMMA Harness by Bob Roberts]
+
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JAMMA JAMMA at Wikipedia]

Revision as of 06:55, 6 March 2006

Brjammaharness.jpg
JAMMA Pinout from BitWalk.com

JAMMA (Japan Arcade Machine Manufacturers' Association) is a standard 56-way connector used on many arcade boards to simplify conversion of cabinets from one game to another. The majority of newer games use a subset of this pinout. Some games (i.e., Street Fighter) which need extra buttons have extra connectors for these additional controls. The JAMMA connector has a .156" pin spacing edge connector (male on the game board). The JAMMA standard was invented in 1985; any game older than this will not be JAMMA.


To connect older non-JAMMA games to a standard JAMMA cabinet a custom wiring harness is needed. In some cases a pre-made convertor harness could be used (the Namco2Jamma convertor shown is available from mikesarcade.com).

Namco to JAMMA harness


The easiest way to connect a PC to an arcade cabinet that is JAMMA ready is to use a J-PAC keyboard encoder (by Ultimarc).

External links