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| Ken Layton:
Dynamo (and a few other game cabinet manufacturers) made some cabinets without back doors. The reasoning was then there would be no way for kids to break into the back of the machine. In these kinds of cabinets ALL access was from the front only. I have seen some cabinets that did have back doors, but they were screwed shut and did not have a lock (or lock hole). Sometimes the wood swells and a back door is hard to remove. That's when I use a metal putty knife to wedge in there and pop it open. |
| SirPeale:
Thanks, Ken. That makes sense. Can you unbolt the monitor shelf? |
| Stingray:
I would assume that the monitor shelf is removable since mine is virtually identical to his except mine doesn't have a monitor shelf and does have a back door. -S |
| RayB:
Here's another thought... Does your cab have a front drawer? When you open the control panel (swivels open) can you pull on it and pull open a drawer? If so, maybe this style cab does not open in the back. I know Dynamo had at least one variation of it's cut-corner cab where a drawer in the front slid out. It was great for swapping PCBs cuz they would just sit in the drawer! ~Ray B. |
| Stingray:
--- Quote from: RayB on February 09, 2005, 01:24:36 pm ---Here's another thought... Does your cab have a front drawer? When you open the control panel (swivels open) can you pull on it and pull open a drawer? If so, maybe this style cab does not open in the back. I know Dynamo had at least one variation of it's cut-corner cab where a drawer in the front slid out. It was great for swapping PCBs cuz they would just sit in the drawer! ~Ray B. --- End quote --- I had a Cyberball like that. Pretty handy. Doesn't look from the picture like his does that though. Mine is hinged on the bottom of the CP, looks like his attaches the same way. -S |
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