Flipper Speakeasy

Speakeasy (Bally, 1982) : pannes et cartes de remplacement (MPU Bally)

Is your Speakeasy by Bally no longer starting, does it have a temperamental roulette wheel, dead displays or coils running wild? These symptoms are typical of Bally microprocessor pinballs, whose original MPU board is now over 40 years old and almost always suffers from a leaking battery. Good news: the BallyFA replacement MPU board, Plug & Play and battery-free, gives your machine a second life.

Speakeasy (Bally, 1982): overview

Released in 1982 with a roaring-twenties casino theme, Speakeasy is a Bally pinball featuring a mechanical roulette wheel, "flyaway" targets and a "Sacrifice" button. It uses the Bally MPU of the AS-2518 series.

  • Manufacturer: Bally
  • Year: 1982
  • Electronic system: Bally MPU (AS-2518)
  • Type: electronic pinball (solid state)
  • Theme: casino / 1920s
BallyFA MPU board for Bally — Speakeasy
The BallyFA MPU board replaces the original Bally/Stern MPU, battery-free.

Common faults (Bally / Stern)

On Bally and Stern microprocessor pinballs (1977-1985), recurring faults come from ageing: battery leaking on the MPU (corrosion of traces and sockets around U10/U11, the number-one cause of dead boards), tired PIA 6821 (U10/U11) (oxidised pins, no start-up), RAM 5101 and sockets to replace, MPU/power connectors oxidised or burnt (look for heat marks), displays with missing segments, and power/driver board (rectifier, fuses, coil transistors) to service.

Multimeter check of a Bally board — Speakeasy
A multimeter helps locate corrosion, voltages and faulty coils.

Issues specific to Speakeasy (forum feedback)

  • Temperamental roulette wheel: wheel index switch and coil to check.
  • "Flyaway" targets: switches and mechanisms to check.
  • Battery leaked on the MPU: corrosion around U10/U11.
  • Dead or partial displays: display and MPU power supply to check.
  • Runaway or dead coils: driver board (transistors, fuses) to service.
  • Oxidised or burnt connectors: to replace (re-pin) to make the machine reliable.

Replacement boards compatible with Speakeasy

BallyDri power and driver board for Bally — Speakeasy
The BallyDri: replacement power + driver board, Plug & Play installation.

📚 To go further: Guide: which MPU board for a Bally / Stern (1977-1985)?

The BallyFA replaces the original MPU board (start-up, logic, switch reading, battery-free memory) and removes the battery, the number-one cause of corrosion. For the coils and power, the BallyDri takes over; the lamps via the BallyLa_60. Plug & Play installation, battery-free, free support. Contact us.

FAQ — Speakeasy Bally

My roulette wheel no longer works.
Check the index switch and coil; on the board side, the BallyFA and BallyDri make the logic and coils reliable.

My Speakeasy no longer starts.
Check the battery and corrosion around U10/U11. The BallyFA replaces the MPU and works without a battery.

Is the BallyFA compatible with my Bally?
Yes, for Bally/Stern microprocessor pinballs (1977-1985). If in doubt, contact us.

Should I keep the original battery?
No. The BallyFA works without a battery and removes the number-one cause of corrosion.

How long does it take to install a replacement board?
Installation is Plug & Play: a few minutes, no soldering, with tutorials and free support.

Does a battery-free board keep the settings and high scores?
Yes. Modern replacement boards use non-volatile memory: no more battery, no more corrosion, and the settings are kept when powered off.

Step-by-step diagnosis

  1. Powered off, visual inspection: look for any trace of battery or corrosion on your Speakeasy's MPU, especially around U10/U11; remove the original battery if it is still present.
  2. Power supply: check the rectifier and the voltages (5 V logic, coil and lamp voltages); replace tired fuses.
  3. Grounds and connectors: redo the grounds and re-pin the oxidised or burnt MPU/power connectors.
  4. MPU: check the PIA 6821 chips (U10/U11) and the RAM; the BallyFA replaces the MPU and works without a battery.
  5. Displays: never plug or unplug a display while powered on; test with a known-good display.
  6. Final test: check start-up, credits, coils and displays; if needed, contact free support.

See also

Sources & further reading

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