# Arcade Cabinet Project Updates - So much to do!!!

**Source:** RetroRalph  
**Type:** video  
**Published:** 2021-04-14  
**Duration:** 9m 11s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJhss7LbrfY

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## Analysis

RetroRalph documents arcade cabinet restoration projects in his garage, including installing a Suzo Hap steering wheel on a Fast and Furious cabinet, replacing a seized PC fan, and providing progress updates on House of the Dead and Killer Instinct projects. The video showcases practical arcade maintenance techniques while highlighting the complexity of Sega cabinet wiring and the accumulation of multiple restoration projects.

### Key Claims

- [MEDIUM] Suzo Hap steering wheels are commonly used in arcade games from this time period — _Speaker states this is a standard component across multiple arcade cabinets_
- [MEDIUM] Sega cabinets are unnecessarily complex in their design and wiring compared to other arcade systems — _Speaker expresses frustration with Sega's approach across multiple machines: 'Why can't Sega ever do anything easy? This is like my third Sega cabinet I've owned'_
- [MEDIUM] House of the Dead cabinets are typically very large and long-form factor machines — _Speaker notes existing House of the Dead cabinets are 'really long' and plans to build a custom smaller version_
- [HIGH] Calibrating arcade steering wheels after replacement requires using the service menu test mode — _Speaker demonstrates the calibration process: center wheel, left/right turns, gas pedal, and handbrake detection_
- [HIGH] The T15H security bit is required to remove the steering wheel cap screws on this Fast and Furious cabinet — _Speaker specifically identifies and uses the T15H bit for the fastening hardware_

### Notable Quotes

> "Why can't Sega ever do anything easy? This is like my third Sega cabinet I've owned, and they just don't believe in doing things simple, I guess."
> — **RetroRalph**, ~12:30
> _Expresses frustration with Sega's complex cabinet design philosophy, highlighting a recurring industry criticism_

> "Make sure you take a picture of things before you disconnect it. Now a lot of times you can go look up the PCB manuals for any game, really, but in case there's a bad scan or you can't find the information you need, it's better to take a picture before you start disconnecting things."
> — **RetroRalph**, ~8:45
> _Practical advice for arcade cabinet restoration and troubleshooting documentation_

> "I have the Astro City. I have the Killer Instinct. I don't know what I'm doing with my Neo Geo. That's working. I have the Thunder Blade. I have CRTs that need to be fixed. There's just stuff everywhere right now."
> — **RetroRalph**, ~17:20
> _Documents the speaker's project backlog and resource constraints affecting restoration progress_

> "I'm going to just do live, really long-form videos of me working in the garage. So you'll be able to see the process as I'm doing it, ask questions, all sorts of stuff like that."
> — **RetroRalph**, ~18:45
> _Announcement of content strategy shift to live streaming on RetroRalph Live channel_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| RetroRalph | person | YouTube content creator producing arcade cabinet restoration videos |
| Scarlet Sprites | person | YouTube creator with Sega cabinet expertise who offered to provide reference photos and assistance for House of the Dead project |
| Arcade Pickers | organization | Source providing arcade equipment and parts to RetroRalph |
| Fast and Furious | game | Arcade racing cabinet undergoing steering wheel replacement and maintenance |
| House of the Dead | game | Sega light gun arcade game being rebuilt into a custom smaller form factor cabinet |
| Killer Instinct | game | Fighting game arcade cabinet awaiting button, joystick, and PCB installation |
| Astro City | product | Arcade cabinet in restoration backlog |
| Thunder Blade | game | Arcade game cabinet in the restoration backlog |
| Neo Geo | product | Working arcade system in speaker's collection |
| Suzo Hap | company | Manufacturer of steering wheel components used in arcade racing games |
| Sega | company | Arcade cabinet manufacturer criticized for complex wiring and design philosophy |
| RetroRalph Live | organization | Live streaming channel for long-form arcade restoration content |

### Signals

- **[design_philosophy]** Recurring criticism of Sega arcade cabinet design philosophy as unnecessarily complex compared to other manufacturers, particularly regarding wiring harnesses and component integration (confidence: medium) — Speaker notes this is his third Sega cabinet and expresses consistent frustration: 'Why can't Sega ever do anything easy? They just don't believe in doing things simple'
- **[product_strategy]** Custom House of the Dead cabinet being built to smaller, more portable form factor than original large standard configurations (confidence: medium) — Speaker describes existing House of the Dead cabinets as 'really long' and plans to create a custom smaller version for easier transportation and mobility
- **[technology_signal]** Content distribution strategy shift from edited YouTube videos to live streaming on dedicated RetroRalph Live channel for extended arcade restoration documentation (confidence: high) — Speaker announces plans to move restoration content to live streaming format for better engagement and faster project completion

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## Transcript

 Welcome back to the channel guys. We are in the garage yet again and in today's episode we're going to place the steering wheel on this Fast and the Furious. Now the reason why this is important is because this process is pretty common. This is a Suzo Hap steering wheel and it's a steering wheel used in a lot of these arcade games of this time period so that's really cool. And then we're going to replace the fan on the PC of this guy because the fan's not running, the PC could overheat and that's not good. And then I got a couple other projects back here that we're going to take a look at. They're in various different stages, so let's just get started. Okay, so the first thing we need to do is remove the cap right here. Now, I've already taken the screws off. The screws are actually going to utilize this T15H bit right here. So we're going to use that. So make sure you get like a kit like this. It has all the security bits in them and everything that you need. And then there's the screws right there. They're pretty rusted. So we took the cap off. So the cap's already off, and then this will simply just come right off. This center cap looks like it pops off, but it's actually part of the molded plastic. And then from there, you're going to have an H3-16, which is this guy right here. You're going to then just take this off. So it's got three screws in the inner circle here. So we're just going to take these three off. And then at that point, the wheel should just come off. yep and that's it that's what holds the wheel on it's just those three screws right here and that's it so we're going to take this sticky disgusting wheel and toss that aside and we're going to put in this nice new wheel right here so we're going to just line it up right there you see it lines up perfectly and then from there we're just going to put our screws back in. So this is going to be pretty easy, an easy fix for us. Before we put the cap on, let's just turn on the game and make sure the wheel calibrates okay and it works, and then we'll put the cap on. Okay, because we replaced the steering wheel, I'm just going to go in here real quick and go to the service menu, which is that button right here, and then we're going to actually recalibrate the steering wheel It might be hard to see this and every test menu is slightly different but it just basically saying turn the wheel to the center and hit the start button turn the wheel to the left and hit the start button turn the wheel to the right and hit the start button and then press and release the gas, then hit test start. Then it says handbrake detected, hit test start, hit test start to exit. And that's it. And then basically we're just going to exit out this menu, and then we should be good to go. All right, so I fired up the game real quick. I checked the steering wheel out. Everything worked great. Felt way better than the old one just because it wasn't all sticky and stuff, but it looks like it drives fine. I think the calibration was a good idea. I don't know if I had to do it, but it's always good to just calibrate it real quick. It's not like it's a hard task, and then you know you're good to go. All right, I'll consider this project complete, and let's go on to the fan replacement. Okay, so I'm in the back of the arcade cabinet now, and we're taking to look at the PC. Now one of the fans on the PC has seized up and it won't spin. I don't want this PC to overheat so I'm going to go and replace that. We're going to bring the PC upstairs and check that out. Before we do that though if you're working on any PC that's part of an arcade cabinet or any arcade PCB make sure you take a picture of things before you disconnect it. Now a lot of times you can go look up the PCB manuals for any game really but in case there's a bad scan or you can't find the information you need it's always good to take a picture before you start disconnecting things. All right, I'm going to get this disconnected and we'll bring it upstairs so we can replace that fan. Okay, so I'm upstairs and you can clearly see this fan is the one that's working and this fan is the one that's not. So we're just going to power down the PC and then replace that fan real quick. So this should just take a second. Okay, we're going to remove this fan simply by pushing these two tabs to the side and then pulling it out. Should come out pretty easy. Okay, there we go. So we're going to pull this guy out and then we're going to put the new one in. Now keep in mind these fans blow in certain directions. So this is actually an exhaust fan. So it's blowing air out. So just make sure that arrow, make sure you look on the side of the fan to make sure which way you're putting it in to make sure it's not going the wrong way. Okay, now that the fan's installed, I actually piggybacked it off of another power connector right here, and I should be able to just power that on, and it should be good to go. So let's give it a shot. All right, both fans are good to go. Okay, now we're going to go downstairs because I have a couple more projects I want to give you guys a progress report on and then we wrap things up You know before we wrap up it might be a good idea to vacuum this thing out So I have this really cool little vacuum Here it is right here I'll have a link in the description of this thing. And we'll just get rid of some of this dust and dirt really quick. Might as well while we're in here. It does an okay job. It's not the best thing ever, but this thing is pretty dusty inside. Probably better off with, like, a canned air thing or something like that, but it does work. but this kind of stuff it probably isn't doing the best job actually this thing is kind of a piece of crap all right never mind it does suck it just doesn't suck very well all right yeah I mean it's kind of working but not really all right just get compressed air whatever all right you know I'm never really good at cleaning things anyway let's go downstairs forget about this it's a stupid idea. I wish it would just suck. Okay, guys, next up on the project list is House of the Dead. I was able to get a House of the Dead PCB, and I got all the wires and the harnesses and everything. Now, why can't Sega ever do anything easy? This is like my third Sega cabinet I've owned, and they just don't believe in doing things simple, I guess. So yeah, so you got the main PCB, and then you got this other breakout board which is the gun sense board so that's for your for your guns and then you have the amplifier and this is just a transformer there so yeah so there's a bunch of stuff on this system it's just a mess man it's a lot of stuff the wire harness i did i was able to sort of harvest this wire harness out of another machine thankfully so i think i have everything i need but i'm gonna use need some help for sure and i looked at the pcb manual and it helped, but I still need some additional assistance. And actually Scarlet Sprites, if you haven't checked him out, go check out his channel. He said, Hey bud, I have a Sega cabinet. I could take some pictures of it and help you out. So the goal is to get this main PCB right here into a smaller cabinet. So I'm going to sort of build my own custom house of the dead cabinet. It'll be much smaller than the house of the dead cabinets that you're used to seeing out there. They usually really long One of them almost has like this long sort of piece And then the I I put a picture up so you can see it I seen a couple of different variants but yeah I've never really seen a small one. So I'm going to make a smaller, more portable, easier to move around house of the dead. At least that's the theory. Uh, so that's it for this project. I know there's not a whole lot of updates. There's not a whole lot of action, but hopefully by the next video, we piece some of this stuff together and we can get this going. The other project I have is over here, and it's the Killer Instinct, which are very, well, actually, there's the Astro City, too, but we'll get to that. I'm waiting for some parts still, and yeah, let's go look at the Killer Instinct. I'll show you what's up with that. Okay, as far as the Killer Instinct goes, I just need to install the buttons, the joysticks, and then just the main PCB board and the piece of plexi that goes over the top, and that's really it, and then wire everything up. So, it's not that much to go. I wish I could say I was further along on that one, but I just have too much, too many projects, and I've been kind of lazy. I'm backlogged. I got the Astro City. I got the Killer Instinct. I don't know what I'm doing with my Neo Geo. That's working. I got the Thunder Blade. I got CRTs that need to be fixed. There's just stuff everywhere right now. And then all of this new stuff coming in from Arcade James Piekarz. So there's actually more stuff in here that I'm not showing you right now. So it's crazy. But I will get to it. I'm going to get to it. We're going to get to it. I'm actually going to have a lot of the content of me doing the restoration stuff over on Retro Ralph Live. So if you haven't subscribed to RetroRav live, definitely go check that channel out. I'm going to just do live, really long-form videos of me working in the garage. So you'll be able to see the process as I'm doing it, ask questions, all sorts of stuff like that. I feel like I'll get these projects done faster if I do more live streaming of the content. Plus, you guys will be there with me. It'll be a lot of fun. So definitely go subscribe to that channel. But that's it for this quick update. I know I wish I could have given you more, but I got to get this stuff done, man. So if you like this video, give me a thumbs up. Consider subscribing to the channel. Turn on notifications so you can be informed of future uploads. And that's it for now, guys. We will see you on the next one.

_(Acquisition: youtube_groq_whisper, Enrichment: v3)_

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-06-06 | Item ID: 517a4439-e395-44e9-bece-8a27c0be9d77*
