Great looking cab. This shows many signs of having been in the hands of an "arcade guy" and restored in several respects (no DK cab would ever naturally look that good after 34 years, unless it was in a closet the whole time).
- Control panel looks new overall, but at any rate, the buttons are not original. Colors and plungers, etc. are different.
- It's a good paint job (never seen one where they painted the INSIDE of the speaker holes!), but it's not factory. DK's came originally with either a fiberglass gelcoat, melamine, or formica (depending on where and when the cab was made). Feel the material on the inside of the control panel (where the latches are). Unless this was a super-detailed restore, THAT will still have the original finish and you'll be able to feel the difference. The fact that the inner-finish is "DK blue", though, means that this was a DK originally.
- If the paint job is new, then that of course means the sideart is.
- The instruction sheet on the back door is DK (not Junior, Popeye, etc.) So assuming that particular back door is original to the cab, that also shows it to be an original DK.
- That isn't a stock DK isolation transformer. You have a PT-8A. Standard with a DK is PT821B (
pic here). The 821B is smaller and a different color. But it's hard to imagine anything that could possibly matter less...
- Probably not worth mentioning, but somebody had some fun diddling with the coin meter. Obviously there has never been a DK machine (or any other arcade machine), that logged damn near a quarter million plays.
- In my experience, an intact Service Switch button cover (the black nub that you press on) is rare. Cool that yours has one.
- Also cool that your cab has the horizontal monitor mounts installed. This will be very handy if you ever want to play Popeye or Mario Brothers. Mine does not have the horizontal mounts (or even the holes for them), so when I want to play Popeye, I just pull the monitor out, turn it, and let it hang loose in there, just letting the shelf support the monitor. Wouldn't want to move it that way, and the screen ends up being a couple inches lower than it should be, but it works.
- The coin slot wiring is just the two wires (orange and brown). To connect both slots, you have to cut the wires and splice one set at the terminals to continue to the other terminals.