Editing SysCon

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 2: Line 2:
Syscon handles power, power-LEDs, tray loading (in conjunction with MechaCon, which actually controls the tray and the blue LED), front buttons and some [[Thermal|thermal management]].
Syscon handles power, power-LEDs, tray loading (in conjunction with MechaCon, which actually controls the tray and the blue LED), front buttons and some [[Thermal|thermal management]].


It only exists on consoles up to the SCPH-390XX series (GH-022 board) (as well as system 246/256). After that, it's functionality was overtaken by the new Dragon-[[MechaCon]].
It only exists on consoles up to the SCPH-39XXX series (GH-022 board). After that, it's functionality was overtaken by the new Dragon-[[MechaCon]].


On B/B'/C/C' [[Chassis types|chassis]] consoles, it's located on a daughter board (GD-011 for B-chassis, GD-012 for B'-chassis, GD-013 for C and C' chassis), together with RTC, EEPROM, clock battery and part of the voltage regulation circuitry.
On B/B'/C/C' [[Chassis types|chassis]] consoles, it's located on a daughter board (GD-011 for B-chassis, GD-012 for B'-chassis, GD-013 for C and C' chassis), together with RTC, EEPROM, clock battery and part of the voltage regulation circuitry.
== Arcade SysCon ==
On Namco System 246 and System 256, the SysCon has some extra functionalities. The most notable extra functionality is the Arcade watchdog, wich is basically a 5 minute timer to shut down the system.
The Mechacon CMD for toggling the state of the blue Eject-LED was reused on these systems as the watchdog reset CMD.


== Hardware ==
== Hardware ==
Line 18: Line 12:
''Pictured above is a SysCon with firmware 2C64 on a GH-015 board.''
''Pictured above is a SysCon with firmware 2C64 on a GH-015 board.''
== Firmware revisions ==
== Firmware revisions ==
''What about GH-008 and GH-016?''
* 1G78 (GH-001, GH-003) (A/A+ chassis)
* 1G78 (GH-001, GH-003) (A/A+ chassis)
* 1V33 (GD-011, GD-012) (B/B' chassis)
* 1V33 (GD-011, GD-012) (B/B' chassis)
* 1V86 (?) (Namco System 246/256 in all? variants, probably also System 147/148?)
* 1V86 (?) (Namco System 147)
* 2A69 (GD-013, GH-008, GH-010, GH-012, GH-013, GH-014, GH-016) (AB/C/C'/D/D' chassis)
* 2A69 (GD-013, GH-010, GH-012, GH-013, GH-014) (C/C'/D/D' chassis)
* 2C64 (GH-015, GH-017, GH-018, GH-019, GH-022) (F/G chassis)
* 2C64 (GH-015, GH-017, GH-019, GH-022) (F/G chassis)
Please note that all contributions to PS2 Developer wiki are considered to be released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.2 (see PS2 Developer wiki:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following hCaptcha:

Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)