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Sega CD (Model 1)

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Sega CD Model 1 ("Front-Loader")
North-American Sega CD Model 1
Specifications
ManufacturerSega Enterprises Ltd.
Optical block by Sony (KSS-240A/KSS-240R)
TypeCD-ROM add-on console
ReleasedDecember 12, 1991 (JP Mega-CD)

October 15, 1992 (US Sega CD)

May 1, 1993 (EU Mega-CD)
Discontinued1994 (superseded by Side-loader & Model 2)
Intro priceJP ¥49 800 • US US$299 • EU £270
CPUMotorola MC68EC000 @ 12.500 MHz (primary)
Sega ASIC “SCD ASIC” with embedded 68000 bus arbiter & rotation/scale unit
Memory768 KB Word-RAM (dual-ported)
512 KB Program RAM
64 KB Back-up RAM (SRAM, battery)
128 KB PCM sample RAM
Storage1× 1 ×-speed CD-ROM (150 kB·s⁻¹)
internal back-up RAM (32 KB user-accessible)
Display320 × 224 / 256 × 224 px, 5-bit RGB, 128 sprites (Genesis VDP)
SoundGenesis PSG & YM2612 FM plus Ricoh RF5C164 8-ch PCM @ 32 kHz • 10-bit DAC
Dimensions294 mm W × 212 mm D × 80 mm H
Weight≈ 2.0 kg (drive + PSU shielding)
OS / FirmwareMega CD System ROM v1.x (128 KB mask ROM)
Predecessor– (first Sega optical system)
SuccessorSega CD (Model 2)
CodenameTMR-50 (Japan R&D), “Topaz” (US)
Model no.HAA-2910 (JP), MK-1601 (US), MK-1690-50 (EU)

The Sega CD Model 1 – marketed in Japan as the Mega-CD – is the original front-loading compact-disc add-on for the Sega Mega_Drive (Model 1). Released in late 1991, it augmented the base console with a faster 12.5 MHz 68EC000, hardware scaling/rotation ASICs, 8-channel PCM audio and the ability to stream full-motion video (Cinepak) from CD-ROM.

Historical context & sales

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  • Concept (1989–1990): Sega R&D2 (Hisashi Suzuki) partnered with Sony Devices Div. to adopt the KSS-240 laser deck.
  • Launch: 12 Dec 1991, JP ¥49 800 – initial shipment 100 k; supply shortages until Feb 1992.
  • US debut: 15 Oct 1992 at US$299 bundled with ‘’Sewer Shark’’ (first US CD-ROM pack-in).
  • Total Model 1 units: ≈ 600 k worldwide (of 2.2 M total Sega CD family).

Architecture overview

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Sub-system IC(s) Notes
Primary CPU MC68EC000FN12 16-bit, no MMU, bus-master shares Genesis address lines
Scaling / Rotation Sony CXD1161P + CXD1162P 1024×1024 pixel source; affine transform to 320×224
PCM audio Ricoh RF5C164 (QFP-80) 8 voices, 10-bit DAC, 32 kHz max
CD controller Hitachi HD641709 MCU (a 6301) + Sega CXD1800 drive DSP Sub-CPU executes CD-DA and ISO9660 BIOS
Gate-array Sega 315-5548 (ASIC) Bus control, battery SRAM decode, host port, DMA to word-RAM
RAM 2 × OKI M514256 (256 K×4) word-RAM
8 × HM514170 (64 K×4) program-RAM
Dual-port by ASIC
Optical deck Sony PU-18 mech. w/ KSS-240A lens 1 × CLV, spindle @ 530 rpm (innermost)

Technical specification (Model 1, BIOS v1.10)

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Processing
12.500 MHz (25 MHz ÷ 2) wait-stated 3–4 cycles to word-RAM
3.58 MHz (NTSC crystal) – handles CD block decode, seek, audio FIFO
5.0 MB·s⁻¹ peak host⇄word-RAM
Memory map (simplified)
2 MB Program RAM
256 KB Word-RAM bank 0
256 KB Word-RAM bank 1 (dual-port)
PCM regs & sample RAM (128 KB windowed)
Backup SRAM 64 KB (battery)
ASIC / host control regs
Sub-CPU I/O FIFO
BIOS ROM 128 KB (mirrored)

Video timing

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  • Pixel clock 13.5 MHz (NTSC) / 13.32 MHz (PAL) via VDP master.
  • Scaled plane generated at 256×A & line-buffered into Genesis VDP CRAM.
  • V-blank interrupt every 262 lines NTSC (≈ 59.92 Hz).

Pin-by-pin expansion bus

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The 50-pin edge (CN-B) carries the Genesis 68000 bus plus additional DMA and audio lines:

Pin Dir Name Description
B01 /AS Address-strobe
B02 IRQ2 CD raises to interrupt Genesis
B03 bi D0 Data bus (even)
B25 CDCLK 12.5 MHz clock from Sega CD
B26 EXCLK 7.67 MHz clock from Genesis
B45 AUD-L PCM mixed left
B46 AUD-R PCM mixed right
B49 +5 V
B50 GND

Full table with all 50 pins on Mega Drive expansion port pinout.

Known hardware revisions & PCB errata

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Assy # Board silk Region Notable changes / bugs Service fixes
171-5978A VA0 JP launch KSS-240A lens, BIOS 1.00 CD door switch mis-adjust – bend lever
171-5978B VA1 BIOS 1.10, word-RAM wait fix Add R511 pull-up (factory bodge)
171-5978C VA2 CXD1162 rev-C, 315-5548A ASIC 74HC00 (IC15) ESD prone – replace with HCT

Common failure points

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  • “GREEN LED but no spin” – blown surface-mount fuse F301 (2 A) or shorted 5 V tantalum C230.
  • Tray won’t eject / belt slip – 40 mm × 1.2 mm neoprene belt hardened. Replace with 41 mm 0.6 mm square belt.
  • No CD audio – CXD1162P pin 47 mute line held low; open Q203 (mute transistor) or BIOS stuck (bad RAM).
  • Distorted PCM – leaking SMD electrolytics around RF5C164: C510 /C511 47 µF.
  • “ERROR 02” (seek timeout) – dirty rails, laser current low (VR102 ≈ 50 mV across TP100/101).
  • Backup RAM corrupt – CR2032 coin cell dead or IC3 SRM2016 failing.

Service manuals & schematics

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General maintenance

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Full disassembly, recap lists and belt change procedure: see Sega CD (Model 1) Maintenance Guide. Capacitor map and polarity silks are on Sega CD (Model 1) Capacitor Replacement Guide.

Troubleshooting

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A step-by-step power-on diagnostic flow (LED blink codes, fuse chart, clock probing) is available on Sega CD (Model 1) Troubleshooting Guide.

Audio/Video modifications

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  • Direct-mix “board-jail”: lift R171 &R172, route RF5C164 output to Genesis EXT stereo jack – no crosstalk.
  • RGB bypass: use Genesis VDP RGB; Sega CD adds no extra graphics plane, so standard MD RGB mod applies.
  • 50/60 Hz region switch – tie ASIC pin 4 ‘AREA’ to DIP switch + patch BIOS byte $1FE1.

Software & homebrew

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Model 1 BIOS 1.10 supports CD-R if session is MODE1+CDDA (avoid 40× burns). Recommended test suites: ‘’Sega CD Test Disc’’ by discedge; ‘’RAM Stress’’ by Luke Usher.

Trivia & pop-culture

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  • ‘’Snatcher’’ (JP) used SCD PCM channels for full Japanese voice acting – a first on 8 Mbit disc.
  • The launch bundle ‘’Sol-Feace’’ shipped on both cart (JP) and CD; players compared load-times as marketing.
  • In TV series ‘’Clarissa Explains It All’’ (1993) a front-loader Sega CD is visible under the CRT.