claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.012
Stern Tech School tutorial on using switch diagnostics to identify and test pinball machine switches.
Switch test displays the last activated switch on the LCD screen and is used to test switches individually
high confidence · Kyle explains the switch test function early in the video
Active switch test shows all switches the game currently sees as closed
high confidence · Kyle demonstrates active switch test and explains its purpose
Switch alerts identify switches that haven't been actuated for approximately 10 games or longer as a maintenance warning
high confidence · Kyle states 'if the game hasn't seen that switch change state...10 games, if the game hasn't seen that switch change state it's going to say you might want to check it'
Finger presses on rollover switches may depress the actuator further than a pinball would in actual gameplay, potentially giving false results
high confidence · Kyle explains why pinballs should be used instead of fingers for testing rollover switches
Each switch in the diagnostics menu displays its number, connector location on node boards, and wire colors for identification
high confidence · Kyle describes the on-screen information showing switch number 28, connector details, and wire colors
“The Switch test is going to display the last activated switch on the LCD screen that you have hit. This is used to test switches individually.”
Kyle @ ~0:45 — Defines core function of switch test mode
“This noise can be really helpful in identifying when a switch has been actuated.”
Kyle @ ~2:30 — Practical testing tip: audio feedback aids diagnostics
“An optical switch uses an invisible beam of light that when broken by a pinball will register as a switch closure to the pinball game.”
Kyle @ ~3:45 — Explains optical switch technology used in modern pinball
“The reason we don't want to use our finger to test these is depending on the switch adjustment, pressing into the routed hole for the rollover switch, the soft squishy part of your finger may be able to depress the actuator further than a pinball could in actual gameplay.”
Kyle @ ~5:00 — Technical explanation for why testing methodology varies by switch type
“If a switch hasn't been actuated and let's generalize and say 10 games, if the game hasn't seen that switch change state it's going to say you might want to check it.”
Kyle @ ~7:15 — Explains switch alert threshold for maintenance warnings
community_signal: Stern Pinball producing educational Tech School content demonstrating ongoing commitment to operator and owner education/support
high · Full dedicated instructional video on diagnostic procedures, with mention of additional Tech School videos available
neutral(0)— Educational video with straightforward, informative tone; no emotional content or controversial opinions present
youtube_auto_sub · $0.000