WhiteStar

The WhiteStar Board System was an arcade system board used for several pinball games designed by Sega Pinball and their successor, Stern Pinball, between 1995 and 2005. It is the successor to Data East Pinball / Sega Pinball's System 11-derived hardware, copied from Williams.[1]

1995's Apollo 13 was the first game to use the WhiteStar System, and 2005's NASCAR (Grand Prix outside the US) was the final game to use the WhiteStar System.

It is succeeded by Stern's "S.A.M. System", which was first used in 2006's World Poker Tour.

Hardware info

Hardware revisions

In 2003, when The Lord of the Rings was released, the WhiteStar's audio hardware underwent major changes. The Motorola 6809 / BSMT2000 sound system was changed to a 32-bit Atmel AT91SAM CPU with three Xilinx FPGAs. This adds hardware emulation of the 6809-BSMT2000 system for backwards-compatibility with previous WhiteStar-based games (some late Terminator 3 machines were actually shipped using this replacement board), as well as adding 16-bit ADPCM compression for the audio. The 16-bit audio is used from Lord of the Rings to NASCAR / Grand Prix.

This revised board is called the CPU/Sound Board II (or the CPU/Sound II Board) in the official schematics.

References

  1. At the time when Data East started out in 1987, Williams was the industry leader of pinball. Hence Mr. Stern copied Williams. So closely, that Data East's system of pinball circuit boards resembled Williams' system at that time (System 11). -- Repairing Data East 1987 (Laser War) to Sega 1995 (Batman Forever). Received on August 11, 2007.
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