claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.022
Multi-year Getaway restoration abandoned original playfield after insert/decal experiments failed repeatedly.
Cary Hardy purchased the Getaway machine in early 2016 at Texas Pinball Festival for an agreed-upon price after initial negotiation
high confidence · Direct account of purchase circumstances and timeline
Replacing all inserts with clear inserts and custom water slide decals created persistent degassing and opacity problems despite multiple clear coat attempts over 1+ year
high confidence · Extensive visual documentation showing repeated failures with bubble formations and visibility issues in insert areas
Hardy used a blowtorch method to remove decals which damaged the wood, requiring stripper chemicals and sanding to repair
high confidence · Explicit description: 'I tried a method that I don't recommend you do and that is with a blowtorch. Yeah it it got them off but it really left a really bad residual behind'
Classic Arcade decals for inserts cost $50 per order, prompting Hardy to scan them and create water slide versions to avoid repeated purchases
high confidence · Direct statement: 'these classic arcade decals are 50 bucks a pop' and decision to scan for digital copies
Hardy eventually purchased a second, backup Getaway playfield from auction at Texas Pinball Festival as a fallback option
high confidence · Reference to 'another getaway machine that I purchased at auction at Texas Pinball Festival'
After abandoning the original playfield restoration, Hardy decided to purchase a new playfield entirely rather than continue experimenting
high confidence · Direct statement: 'I'm buying a new play field. I'm done with it.'
Hardy's goal is to have the Getaway machine ready for Texas Pinball Festival but acknowledges uncertainty about meeting that deadline
high confidence · Stated intention: 'My goal is to have this thing ready for Texas Pinball Festival, but it is yet to be seen if I will accomplish that'
The total restoration effort on the original playfield spanned over a year before Hardy decided to abandon it
“The tale of how one man wanted his machine to be original but the battle to do so would be much more than he had anticipated.”
Cary Hardy@ 0:25 — Sets thematic framing for the entire restoration saga
“Fuck it.”
Cary Hardy@ 0:50 — Represents emotional turning point where Hardy gave up on original playfield
“I tried a method that I don't recommend you do and that is with a blowtorch. Yeah it it got them off but it really left a really bad residual behind.”
Cary Hardy@ 3:38 — Documents failed technique that created additional restoration work
“What if I'm able to get all of these inserts today but I made them clear instead like a transparent kind of like these right here... what if I replaced every insert in this game with new clear ones like these and then I would be able to led color this any way i see fit”
Cary Hardy@ 11:51 — Shows initial enthusiasm and creative vision that led to the extended restoration attempt
“The clear was too hot for the adhesive on these decals is the only thing I can assume because they started really lifting and gas started just basically coming out from underneath the decals.”
Cary Hardy@ 18:37 — Documents the degassing problem that plagued the restoration
“I wanted so badly for this play field to be the first of its kind. And essentially it still is the first of its kind. It just doesn't look as good as I want it to look.”
Cary Hardy@ 27:55 — Reveals the core tension between originality/uniqueness and quality/aesthetics
community_signal: Hardy utilized pinball community resources (Pin-Side forum documentation, buddy assistance with decal scanning/water slide creation) for troubleshooting and cost-reduction strategies
medium · References to Pin-Side thread documentation, buddy scanning decals to create water slide versions, and implicit community engagement through YouTube channel
design_philosophy: Hardy's original vision was to create a one-of-a-kind Getaway with clear inserts and custom LED-compatible decals—a personalized, innovative restoration approach
high · Explicit statement: 'I wanted so badly for this play field to be the first of its kind' and detailed explanation of clear insert concept with LED color customization capability
product_concern: Classic Arcade premium insert decals failed to provide sufficient opacity when applied to clear inserts, even when doubled/layered, creating persistent visibility issues
high · Multiple photo comparisons showing transparency problems and statement: 'They're on there. They're not very opaque. you can see through them but what if I doubled up'
sentiment_shift: Dramatic shift from enthusiasm about custom insert innovation to frustration and eventual abandonment after 1+ year of failed attempts
high · Transition from detailed planning of clear insert concept to explicit statements like 'I'm done' and 'Fuck it' after repeated failures
technology_signal: Persistent degassing and opacity issues with clear coating over water slide decals on inserts made the custom insert approach technically unfeasible despite multiple experimental approaches
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.094
high confidence · Explicit statement: 'that whole span of pictures and work, that was over at least a year's worth of time'
“If I'm putting this much time and effort into something, guys, I want it to really look good. If it wasn't my machine, then I wouldn't care as much, but it's something that I'm going to be looking at, looking down at for years to come.”
Cary Hardy@ 28:07 — Explains the psychological burden of perfectionism on personal restoration projects
“I'm buying a new play field. I'm done with it. I mean, it was going to be nice to be original, one of a kind, but I'm honestly just done with it.”
Cary Hardy@ 29:01 — Explicit statement of abandonment of original playfield approach
high · Repeated documentation of bubble formations, gas pockets, and visibility issues across multiple clear coat sessions; Hardy's observation: 'The clear was too hot for the adhesive on these decals'