Magic Play sp. z o.o. | ul. Chocimska 6, 62-800 Kalisz, Poland | [email protected] |+48 753 21 88
If the dispenser runs out of tickets, LuckyNumbers will indicate the error after 5 seconds and stop the motor. Since it cannot detect
when the tickets are refilled or unjammed, the operator has to press any of the menu buttons on the control board, or press t he START
button on connector (8) to restart the dispenser.
Coin selector (5):
The 10 pin flatcable connector is designed to connect to an EMP 8x0.00 coin selector. The flatcable carries the DC power supply to the
selector, and coin inputs 1 to 6.
Audio connector (4):
Sound effects are generated on-board from MP3 files on the micro-SDcard. This stereo jack connector supplies low level audio signals
that are acceptable for almost any PC speaker system with built -in amplifier. Choose a system with the appropriate amount of output
power.
Power supply and expansion connector (3 and 21):
The power supply connects to the electronic control board through a 4-pin connector.
Plus is at the top, GND at the bottom. The intermediate 2 pins are communication wires that link the optional extension boards to the
control board.
Please check the wiring carefully before switching on.
The DIN-rail mounted switch-mode power supply can deliver 12V DC 60W from any mains power (110-240V, 50 and 60Hz). It supplies
the electronic control board, the LED displays (approximately 15W), the lamp panel, the lamps in the switches, and the coin selector.
SD card (2):
The SD card contains audio sample files in MP3 format. There is one sound sample for each prize, and
then some for pause, play and active (flash). Preferably, the MP3’s should have a sample rate of
144kbps to 192kbps, but other rates may also function. If any of these files is missing at power-up, the
display will show an error message.
Do NOT change the SD-card under power. Switch off first!
To access the micro-SD card, slide the silver cover approximately 1mm upwards until it hinges open.
Install the micro-SD card exactly into the slots, keep it depressed there, then close the cover and slide
it down.
The micro-SD card must be formatted as FAT32, the most common format for these cards. FAT12,
FAT16, NTFS, ExFAT and other formats are not supported. If necessary, reformat the disk on a
Windows PC with a micro-SD slot or USB-interface, and force the PC to use FAT32 or use a special tool,
e.g. from:
https://www.sdcard.org/downloads/formatter_4/
Cards with a capacity of 1 to 16GB (a.o. Lexar and Sandisk) have been successfully tested in the machine, and larger capacities should
work as well. Note however that there may be cards for sale that do not work in embedded systems. It is strongly advised to first test a
card before ordering a larger batch.