Flipper Tiger Rag

Tiger Rag (Nuova Bell Games, 1984): faults and replacement boards (Bally-compatible)

Is your Nuova Bell Games Tiger Rag no longer starting, showing dead displays or wild coils? Good news: Tiger Rag is built on a Bally AS-2518-35 base, so the symptoms and solutions are those of Bally microprocessor pinball machines. The BallyFA replacement MPU board, Plug & Play and battery-free, gives your machine a second life.

Tiger Rag (Nuova Bell Games, 1984): overview

Released in 1984 by the Italian manufacturer Nuova Bell Games, Tiger Rag is a solid-state pinball offered as a conversion kit reusing Bally electronics (MPU AS-2518-35 board). A very limited production run (estimated at 500-700 units), making it a rare machine.

  • Manufacturer: Nuova Bell Games (Bally base)
  • Year: 1984
  • Electronic system: Bally MPU AS-2518-35 (compatible)
  • Type: electronic pinball (solid state)
  • Theme: tiger / jazz
BallyFA replacement MPU board — Tiger Rag
The BallyFA replacement MPU board: battery-free, Plug & Play installation.

Common faults (Bally / Stern)

On Bally and Stern microprocessor machines (1977-1985), the recurring faults come from ageing: leaking battery on the MPU (corrosion of traces and sockets around U10/U11, the no. 1 cause of dead boards), worn PIA 6821 (U10/U11) (oxidised legs, impossible start-up), 5101 RAM 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 overhaul.

Multimeter check on an MPU board — Tiger Rag
A multimeter check pinpoints a corroded battery, power supply and faulty coils.

Issues specific to Tiger Rag (forum feedback)

  • Very limited production (500-700 units): rare Bell Games parts and ROMs; keep the original ROMs when replacing a board.
  • Leaking battery on the MPU: corrosion around U10/U11, to be treated before powering up.
  • Dead or partial displays: display power supply and MPU to check.
  • Wild or inert coils: driver board (transistors, fuses) to overhaul.
  • Oxidised or burnt connectors: to be replaced (repinned) to make the machine reliable.
  • Blowing fuses: short-circuited rectifier or coil to track down.

Replacement boards compatible with Tiger Rag

  • BallyFA — replacement MPU board (battery-free), Bally-35 base.
  • BallyDri — power supply + driver.
  • BallyLa_60 — lamp driver.
BallyDri power and driver board — Tiger Rag
The BallyDri: replacement power and driver board, battery-free.

📚 Further reading: Guide: which MPU board for a Bally / Stern (1977-1985)?

The BallyFA replaces the original MPU board (start-up, logic, battery-free memory) and removes the battery, the no. 1 cause of corrosion. As Tiger Rag uses specific Bell Games ROMs, contact us for the right ROM configuration. For coils and power, the BallyDri takes over; the lamps via the BallyLa_60. Plug & Play installation, battery-free, free support. Contact us.

FAQ — Tiger Rag Nuova Bell Games

Is the BallyFA suitable for Tiger Rag?
Yes: Tiger Rag uses a Bally AS-2518-35 base. Contact us for the configuration of the specific Bell Games ROMs.

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

Coils run wild or do not respond.
On the power side, the driver board is to blame: the BallyDri (power supply + driver) replaces it.

Should I keep the original battery?
No. The BallyFA works without a battery and removes the no. 1 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. Power off, visual inspection: look for any battery or corrosion traces on the MPU of your Tiger Rag, especially around U10/U11; remove the battery if still present.
  2. Power supply: measure the 5 V and check it reaches the MPU; check the rectifier bridge and the power-supply fuses.
  3. Grounds: redo the grounds between the MPU, the power/driver board and the display.
  4. Connectors: repin the oxidised Molex connectors, especially the MPU↔power-supply link.
  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; the BallyFA replaces the MPU, battery-free. If needed, contact free support.

See also

Sources & further reading

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