claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.014
Cary Hardy fixes Back to the Future lamp matrix bleed by re-soldering loose diode.
Lamp matrix bleeds (lights coming on when they shouldn't) are caused by loose diode connections or bad solder joints on the playfield
high confidence · Direct demonstration and diagnosis on Back to the Future; Cary identifies the culprit as a poorly soldered diode that slides freely in its socket
Diagnostic method: watch demo mode light scan to identify where unintended lights activate, then narrow location by testing specific playfield components
high confidence · Cary's systematic approach watching demo mode, identifying Lamp Return 4 row, then narrowing to specific playfield area and testing individual lights
Some previous repairs on Back to the Future may have used quick fixes (loose diodes) instead of proper soldering
medium confidence · Cary notes the diode 'might have been a quick fix in the past by somebody' and observes no original soldering on the connection
Back to the Future has additional issues beyond lamp matrix (non-working flashers) that require separate repair
high confidence · Cary states at end: 'I've discovered another issues that I'm gonna need to resolve on that Back to the Future machine is that I have some flashers that aren't working'
Ball contact with upper playfield ramps can over time cause damage to nearby components like diode sockets
medium confidence · Cary speculates: 'once you hit this ramp or even this ramp up here the ball sometimes launches and makes contact with these things and who knows maybe over time maybe something's starting to...'
“Some lights are coming on that don't need to be coming on. It's a huge deal. The OCD in me is just screaming and it needs to be repaired.”
Cary Hardy@ 1:07 — Sets up the motivation for the diagnostic video; emphasizes why seemingly minor lamp matrix issues matter to serious pinball enthusiasts
“If they were lit fully all the way like this, then I'd say we more than likely have a board issue. But since they're only vaguely lit up, then that tells me that I've got a bleed somewhere.”
Cary Hardy@ 2:01 — Demonstrates diagnostic reasoning: full illumination vs. partial indicates board vs. playfield issue
“so when I'm messing with this the lights go away ah you son of a bitch you are the culprit so it's this little bastard right here”
Cary Hardy@ 6:24 — Moment of discovery when testing individual playfield components reveals the loose diode socket is the problem
“Look how I can slide that around. So as long as I keep it making contact, it should be all right.”
Cary Hardy@ 8:26 — Confirms the diode is not properly seated; demonstrates the loose connection that was causing the bleed
“lamp matrix problems can sometimes be a big hassle because you're having to go underneath the playfield and trace the wire to every single bulb to make sure that your connections are good”
Cary Hardy@ 9:47 — Explains why lamp matrix diagnosis is challenging and time-consuming for technicians
operational_signal: Cary Hardy demonstrates systematic lamp matrix troubleshooting methodology suitable for content creator/technician education
high · Uses demo mode observation, identifies specific lamp return row, narrows location, tests individual components, identifies root cause (loose diode), implements solder repair
product_concern: Back to the Future exhibits lamp matrix bleed from loose diode socket, suggesting either manufacturing defect or previous inadequate repair; may indicate quality control issue
medium · Cary notes diode 'might have been a quick fix in the past' with 'no soldering job on this' originally, suggesting initial assembly quality issue or failed prior repair
positive(0.85)— Cary is satisfied with the quick diagnosis and repair; frustrated by the issue but pleased it resolved easier than expected. No criticism of manufacturers or community; educational and practical tone throughout.
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.032