claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.017
Jon restores converted Smash TV arcade, discovers original artwork beneath paint.
The cabinet was converted from original Smash TV to a 60-in-1 multi-game cabinet, with the monitor rotated 90 degrees and two support boards removed
high confidence · Jon explains the original monitor mounting boards were removed when converted to 60-in-1, and the monitor was mounted vertically instead of horizontally
Original Smash TV artwork is still preserved beneath the black and white paint layer and can be revealed using Citrus Strip
high confidence · Jon demonstrates the artwork preservation on both sides of the cabinet after stripping paint with Citrus Strip product
A 25-inch CRT monitor removal is a two-person job but Jon completed it solo, though with difficulty
high confidence · Jon repeatedly emphasizes the task should be two-person work and notes he 'broke that bottom board off' during solo removal
Jon fabricated replacement support boards from lumber purchased at Lowe's, cut to 25 inches using a circular saw
high confidence · Jon shows the wood purchase, cutting process, and installation of L-brackets for reinforcement
The CRT monitor test showed functional display with minor horizontal size adjustment needed
medium confidence · Jon notes 'the horizontal size needs to be adjusted' but describes the image as 'looks like maybe okay' and 'doesn't look too bad'
“I gotta be real with you. I wasn't sure I wanted to take on this project. But when I realized it was an original Smash TV, I loved that game so I figured, Jon, hey, what the heck.”
Jon@ 1:33 — Jon's motivation shift upon discovering the arcade was an original Smash TV rather than a generic conversion
“I honestly, I can't even begin to tell you how much I dislike. I'll never know who it is, but how much I dislike the person that turned a Smash TV into a 60-in-1.”
Jon@ 2:39 — Strong emotional reaction to the arcade's previous modification, though he reframes it positively as preservation work
“A 25 inch monitor. You can do a 19 by yourself, but 25s can be really heavy. And I'm stubborn and I'm gonna do this stuff by myself.”
Jon@ 2:06 — Jon acknowledges the physical challenge but insists on solo completion, establishing a running theme of the video
“I have a history of not being the best with woodworking. So something minor like this is a big win for me personally.”
Jon@ 5:09 — Jon demonstrates self-awareness about his skill gaps and celebrates small accomplishments as growth
“I'm the power tool master now man that's it just give me a anyways you guys know what's up it's a really clean it's a it's a pretty easy cut”
Jon@ 3:52 — Humorous self-deprecating comment about his power tool abilities after joking about his prior struggles
community_signal: Arcade restoration content creators (Jon/RetroRalph and Scarlet Sprites) documenting similar projects and cross-promoting community support
medium · Jon recommends viewers watch Scarlet Sprites' completed Smash TV restoration video and encourages audience engagement
restoration_signal: Original game and artwork successfully preserved through careful restoration rather than conversion to modern replacement
high · Jon states 'I don't need to put on reproduction artwork because the original artwork's under there' and focuses restoration on returning cabinet to original Smash TV configuration
product_strategy: Discovery of original arcade artwork preserved under paint layers, enabling authentic restoration without reproduction decals
high · Jon demonstrates with Citrus Strip revealing original Smash TV artwork on both cabinet sides
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.030