**************************************************************************************

		                       PinMAME

		      (Pinball Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator)

		                     Version 1.50

		                  (November 1, 2004)

		                http://www.pinmame.com

**************************************************************************************



Latest Info

-----------

  See the whatsnew.txt for latest additions to PinMAME!



What is it?

-----------

  PinMAME emulates the hardware found in almost every solid state pinball machine created from

  the mid 1970's through 2003. Currently, the following pinball hardware is emulated:



  Williams/Bally WPC, Williams/Bally System 11, Williams System 9, Williams System 7,

  Williams System 6, Williams System 4, Williams System 3,

  Data East AlphaNumeric System, Data East 128x16 DMD, Data East 128x32 DMD,

  Data East/Sega 192x64 DMD, Sega/Stern Whitestar System, Stern MPU-100, Stern MPU-200,

  Bally MPU-17 & MPU-35, Bally Video/Pinball, Bally 6803,

  Gottlieb System 80, 80a, 80b, System 3, Hankin, Gameplan MPU-1 & MPU-2, Atari,

  Zaccaria, Taito of Brazil, Midway, Capcom, Alvin G. and Co., Technoplay, Mr.Game, Spinball.



  *Note: Emulation is not 100% working on all hardware.



  PinMAME is built as an add-on to the MAME 0.76 Source Code.



  All the MAME readme file with all disclaimers, credits and instructions are included for

  info on using MAME related functions.



  All standard MAME "functions" work in PinMAME (profiler, debugger, cheats,

  record/playback, command line switches etc.)



What does it do?

----------------

  Before you start to extract the ROMS from your favorite pinball machine please note:



  The PinMAME pinball emulator/simulator is not 100% playable. It only emulates the

  electronic circuit boards and the display in the pinball machine backbox.

  There is no playfield and no balls that you will see displayed!



  However, you can activate switches with you keyboard, see display animations,

  and listen/record the pinball game sounds.





Games supported

----------------

  Williams/Bally WPC:  All games from Dr. Dude (1990) to Cactus Canyon (1998)

  Williams/Bally System 11: All games from High Speed (1986) to Dr.Dude (1990)

  Williams System 9: All games from Space Shuttle (1984) to Comet (1985)

  Williams System 7: All games from Black Knight (1980) to Star Light (1984)

  Williams System 6: All games from Blackout (1979) to Alien Poker (1980)

  Williams System 4: All games from Phoenix (1978) to Stellar Wars (1979)

  Williams System 3: All games from HotTip (1977) to Disco Fever (1978)

  Data East AlphaNumeric System: All games from Laser War (1987) to The Simpsons (1990)

  Data East 128x16 DMD: All games from Checkpoint (1991) to Hook (1992)

  Data East 128x32 DMD: All games from Lethal Weapon 3 (1992) to Guns 'n Roses (1994)

  Sega 192x64 DMD: All games from Maverick (1994) to Batman Forever(1995)

  Sega/Stern Whitestar: All games from Apollo 13 (1995) to Ripley's (2004)

  Stern MPU-100: All games from Stingray (1977) to Magic (1979)

  Stern MPU-200: All games from Meteor (1979) to Lazer Lord (1984)

  Bally MPU-17: All games from Freedom (1977) to Black Jack (1978)

  Bally MPU-35: All games from Lost World (1978) to Cybernaut (1985)

  Bally Video/Pinball: Baby Pacman (1982) and Granny & The Gators (1984) is supported.

  Gottlieb System 80: All games from Spiderman (1980) to Haunted House (1982)

  Gottlieb System 80a: All games from Devil's Dare (1982) to Ice Fever (1985)

  Gottlieb System 80b: All games from Triple Play (1985) to BoneBusters (1989)

  Gottlieb System 3: All games from Lights,Camera,Action (1989) to Barb Wire (1996)

  Hankin Pinball: All games from FJ Holden (1978) to Orbit 1 (1981)

  Game Plan Pinball: All games from Rio (1978) to Cyclopes (1985)

  Atari Pinball: All games from Atarians (1976) to Hercules (1979)

  Zaccaria Pinball: All games from Winter Sports (1978) to Spooky (1987) that are available.

  Taito Pinball: All that's available... games between 1980 and 1985.

  Midway Pinball: Rotation VIII (1978).

  Capcom Pinball: All games from Pinball Magic (1995) to Kingpin (1996)

  Alvin G. and Co: All games from World Tour (1992) to Pistol Poker (1993)

  Technoplay: Scramble (1987)

  Mr. Game: Dakar and Motor Show (1988)

  Spinball: Jolly Park (1996)

  Nuova Bell: F1 Grand Prix (1987) - Not working yet

  Prototype games: Dave Nutting's Flicker (Sep 1974), and Bally's Bow & Arrow (Jan 1976)



  Supported means that the game loads and the display starts up with lamps etc. All games

  enter attract mode and you can use the Coin Door switches to enter the menus.



    *Note: Sound is not supported, or may not work properly for all games.

   **Note: A FEW games may not work or be supported due to customization of the original hardware

  ***Note: Some games may not be supported simply because we could not find full rom sets.



Simulated?

----------

  For many games there is a ball simulator which you can use to simulate "playing" the game.

  The simulator allows you to use the keyboard to make shots/hit targets with your virtual/

  invisible pinball..



  Essentially, it triggers the correct switches depending on where the balls are located.



  (You can program a simulator for your own favourite game if you know a

  bit of programming and a lot about the game. If you are intersted let us know and we'll

  try to explain how to do it)



  For more information, please refer to simulation.txt for instructions on using the pinball

  simulator built into pinmame!



  *NEW*: Many games not fully simulated, now have preliminary simulator support!





Instructions

-------------

  Only PinMAME specific setting are listed here. Please read the MAME readme

  file for instructions on using mame and all it's options.



  Note: The ROMS downloaded *directly* from William's website may be compressed with a zip

  version not supported by mame.



  If they do not work for you, you will need to uncompress them (using pkzip or Winzip for example),

  and recompress them using the "normal compression" setting!



  Roms available from other websites should work fine!



  Some ROM images are double size (i.e. the data appears twice).

  This is most often done on purpose due to the limited availability

  of smaller sized EPROMS or to simplify upgrades (all ROM images same size).

  PinMAME accepts the double sized ROMs but the checksum verification

  is disabled. The -verifyroms will still report wrong sized ROMs.





Command line switches

---------------------

  These options can be set on the command line or in mame.cfg:



  -[no]dmd_compact   off = Display a more DMD like display (space between dots)

                     on  = Display a compact DMD display



  -[no]dmd_only      off = Display lamps, swithes and simulator

                     on  = Don't display lamps, switches and simulator

                           (they still work). Good when creating animations

                           or screen shots!



  -[no]cheat         on  = Speed up WPC game start up by disabling checksum

                           (does not work with Dr. Dude). Try it on a security

                           PIC game for an interesting message. The

                           functionality is present in the roms, PinMAME just

                           enables it.

                           Also enables MAME cheats (e.g overclocking)

                     off = Normal startup



  -dmd_antialias n   Antialias the DMD display with intensity 0-100%.



Other MAME settings (modified to work with PinMAME)

---------------------------------------------------

  - The display looks better with -noscanlines

  - Display must be forced to 8 bit (-depth 8) if it is not doing so automatically.

  - Printer output will be saved in the MEMCARD directory

  - You may underclock the DCS sound CPU to increase performance but

    sound will be slightly delayed (not synchronized with the display)

    and will sometimes be garbled. Use F8,F9,F11 keys for underclocking.

  - DCS GAMES: Use -samplerate 32000 for the most accurate sound reproduction



PinMAME Specific Command line switches

--------------------------------------

  The following are new command line switches for PinMAME only, and do not

  exist in MAME.



  These can be set on the command line or in mame.cfg



  -dmd_red   0-255 (Controls the amount of red displayed for a DMD Dot when

                    it's lit at 100%!)

  -dmd_green 0-255 (Controls the amount of green displayed for a DMD Dot when

                    it's lit at 100%!)

  -dmd_blue  0-255 (Controls the amount of blue displayed for a DMD Dot when

                    it's lit at 100%!)

  -dmd_perc66 0-100 (Sets the Percentage to display a DMD Dot which is lit

                    at 66%, Default = 67%)

  -dmd_perc33 0-100 (Sets the Percentage to display a DMD Dot which is lit

                    at 33%, Default = 34%)

  -dmd_perc0  0-100 (Sets the Percentage to display a DMD Dot when NOT lit.

  -dmd_antialias 0-100 (sets the dmd antialiasing intensity)

  -dmd_only         (don't display lamp/switch/solenoid matrices)

  -dmd_compact      (display dmd and led displays in a more compact format)

  (for more information on the settings above, see "Changing the Look of the DMD")





General Keys

------------

  Each Hardware platform supports different keys. See Keys.txt for more info.



Controlling switches (manually)

-------------------------------



  The following keys will toggle the state of a switch



  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

  ---------------

  Q,W,E,R,T,Y,U,I Select Column 1-8

  A,S,D,F,G,H,J,K Select Row    1-8



  For example, to toggle switch 34 (Col 3, Row 4) press E while holding F!

  If the game has a simulator, press "Del" key to toggle between simulator keys

  and the switch keys.





DIP settings

-------------

  You can change the country and other settings for the game in the DIP menu.

  All games does not support all country settings.



  Each game and the simulator can use some "fake" DIP settings to

  choose between different hardware options (e.g. number of balls installed).



Display

-------

  The display shows the DMD or the Alphanumeric LEDs and optionally

  (via the -[no]dmd_only command line option) three matrices:



  Top:		Lamp Matrix

  Middle:	Switche Matrix

  Bottom: 	Solenoids/Flasher Matrix

  Below: 	Diagnostic Lights found on the main hardware board.



  PinMAME contains functionality to diplay the lamp matrix laid out similar

  to the real pinball machine. See TZ for an example.



  If you want to do a similar layout for you favorite game which does not

  yet exist, let us know.



Changing the Look of the DMD

----------------------------



 Changing Color:



   Every dot in the DMD uses an RGB(red, green, blue) color triplet to specify

   the color of each dot to display. To change colors properly, you must know

   the appropriate RGB numbers of the color you wish to use.



   For example, PinMAME's default is a yellowish color: Red = 255, Green = 224,

   Blue = 32

   For an orange color, you could use: Red = 255, Green = 64, Blue = 0

   For red dots, you could use: Red = 255, Green = 0, Blue = 0



   Experiment with the #'s, until you find colors that look good to you!



 Changing the Intensity of the DMD Dots:



   The DMD uses 3 levels of intensity (100%,66%,33%) plus an "unlit" state

   to create graphics on the display. 100% are dots that are fully lit,

   where as 66%, 33%, 0% will each be darker than the fully lit dot,

   by a certain percentage.



   You can control these percentages yourself to change the appearance

   of the DMD. You can change the intensities, using dmd_perc66, dmd_perc33

   and dmd_perc0. You cannot change a fully lit dot's intensity. It must

   always be 100%.



   For example, to make the DMD Dots much closer in intensity, you could adjust

   the settings to (100%,90%,80%), by setting dmd_perc66 = 90, dmd_perc33 = 80.

   This would result in animations where the contrast between each of the 3

   intensity levels would be minimal.



   To make the contrast even more drastic, you could use (100%,50%,20%),

   by setting dmd_perc66 = 50, dmd_perc33 = 20.



   These are just examples to demonstrate the functionality. Using these

   #'s, would probably not look very good! :)



   As with the Colors, experiment with the intensity levels, until you find

   #'s that look good to you!





Sound Command Mode

------------------



  PinMAME has the ability to let you trigger sound commands manually. This

  will let you play any sound the pinball game can make. Hit the F4 key to

  turn Sound Command Mode on or off. Follow the instructions on screen to

  generate sounds.



  The sound commander work in two modes:

  Manual mode:  you enter the commands directly using the arrows.

                NOTE: Not all Sound Command #'s generate a sound. e.g.

                Many games don't have a sound for command #01!

                Most games require two bytes for each command.



  Command mode: Sound command are read from the "sounds.dat" file

                and you can scroll thru all available commands

                with the arrow keys. Look in the sounds.dat for

                details on hw to use it.



  For some games the sound command history is displayed. It can be useful

  to find out how certain sound are generated.



Recording Sounds to a Wave File

-------------------------------



  PinMAME can record the sound output to a wave file for you to play back

  anytime you want. Hit the F5 key to begin recording, and hit F5 again,

  to stop recording.

  The files are created in the wavefile directory. They begin with the name

  of the game, plus a #, just like screenshots work.



  If you're having trouble make sure your .cfg file points to a valid directory,

  and that you have enough free disk space to create the wave.



  Important:

  ----------



  WAV files can become *very* big quickly. These are not compressed like

  MP3 files, so be carefull. You can easily end up with 50MB wav files

  for just a few minutes of recording!



Accessing Williams/Bally WPC - Hidden Menu

------------------------------------------



  Did you know that all WPC Machines have a hidden menu?

  Yes, it's true. To access it, you must leave the bookkeeping menu while

  holding down 'up' [9] and 'down' [8] buttons. i.e. press 'Enter' [0] three

  times, so that "B1. Main Audits" is flashing as the selected choice

  Now hold down 'up' [9] and 'down' [8] and press 'escape' [7].

  If you did it correctly, you should see a new choice on the menu:

  EXEC LOCKUPS - B.1 01..... Using the normal Up/Down keys you can cycle through

  the other new choices...Try this on your real machine at home too!





Known Bugs

----------

 See bugs.txt for list of known problems with PinMAME.



The PinMAME Development Team

----------------------------

Steve Ellenoff     (sellenoff@hotmail.com)

Tom Haukap         (Tom.Haukap@t-online.de)

Martin Adrian      (wpcmame@hotmail.com)

Gerrit Volkenborn  (gaston@yomail.de)

Brian Smith        (destruk@vpforums.com)

Thomas Behrens     (behrens@tecs.de)
Oliver Kaegi       (okaegi@freesurf.ch)


PinMAME Contributors

--------------------

Marton Larrosa     (marton@mail.com)

Jarek Parchanski   (jpdev@priv6.onet.pl)

Jonathan N. Deitch (jdeitch@litz.org)

Dave Roberts       (daverob@cwcom.net)

Dorsola            (dorsola@descent2.com)

Johan S            (arcadepreserv@hotmail.com)

Guru               (theguru@emuunlim.com)

Martin Wiest       (Mr.Startrek@gmx.de)

Joep               (veld2611@planet.nl)

Jim Hernandez      (vidpro1@netzero.net)

Douglas Cope       (djcope11@yahoo.co.uk)

Silvio Finotti     (silviorf@yahoo.com)

Yvon Poulin        (darkness21@globetrotter.net)



Note from the PinMAME Dev. team

-------------------------------



We're working hard to improve this great emulator, and welcome your feedback!!

Please do not hesitate to contact us with questions, bug reports, suggestions,

whatever!

