claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.019
Batman '89 restoration: LED conversion, board repairs, PinSound install, successful smoke test.
Flasher bulbs on the backbox board were melted and fused to plastic, requiring replacement
high confidence · Direct observation during board work: 'The flasher bulbs are literally melted, fused to the plastic'
A transistor (Q44) on the board had blown/burnt out and needed replacement to restore vupper coil functionality
high confidence · Visual inspection and successful replacement: 'Q44 No longer looks like it's been burnt to a crisp'
Several LED connections on the lamp driver board had poor solder joints causing dim or non-functional LEDs
high confidence · Identified during LED conversion: 'certain poles are very dim and one in particular is not even working... no kind of contact on here basically' — resolved via solder reflow
The buck mechanism was missing its spring, causing the transistor to fail from repeated activation
high confidence · Root cause analysis: 'I installed the spring on this buck that was missing it... that should resolve our issue with that transistor blowing up like that'
A switch on the buck was positioned approximately one inch outside the wood rails, requiring rotation to fit properly
high confidence · Measurement during assembly: 'that switch is hanging a good almost a solid inch outside of the wood rails that's not gonna go in'
“Oh my god. Look at this crap. The flasher bulbs are literally melted, fused to the plastic.”
Cary Hardy @ 0:00-0:30 (opening) — Establishes severity of backbox board condition; flasher damage is severe enough to warrant complete replacement approach
“I'm like, I've got two plastic caps. Where do they go to? They go to right here in front of these.”
Cary Hardy @ ~2:00 — Demonstrates discovery of unknown components during reassembly; resolved by proper installation before LED conversion
“this is even thicker than the original stuff that's on there it's like double... should hold up and this is even thicker than the original stuff that's on there”
Cary Hardy @ ~5:00 — Describes reinforcement solution using plexi office nameplates to fill ramp gaps; upgrade approach improves durability over original design
“this is one of my biggest pet peeves when people redo machines is if they spend no time and effort on making this look sexy... when you take that lockdown bar off and you see what this is going to look like it's just it's just a nice touch is all”
Cary Hardy @ ~8:00 — Philosophy statement on restoration standards; emphasizes attention to hidden details (lockdown bar area) as mark of quality work
“This little decal right here makes a world of difference along with also getting the bar all nice and cleaned up... maybe 11 or 12 bucks from Titan Pinball.”
Cary Hardy @ ~12:00 — Endorsement of Titan Pinball lockdown bar decals; demonstrates how small cosmetic upgrades significantly improve appearance with minimal cost
“No locked on coil. And no smoke or anything like that coming from that section of the board.”
Cary Hardy @ ~28:00 (smoke test #2) — Confirmation of successful transistor replacement; critical validation that board repair resolved the coil lockup issue
“I almost put this on here didn't realize how dirty it was... this is gonna work just gonna take some time the thing is so filthy my god”
Cary Hardy — Expresses surprise at backglass condition; underscores extent of machine deterioration requiring cleanup before final assembly
community_signal: Titan Pinball provides customizable lockdown bar decals as accessible, low-cost cosmetic upgrade for restorers; represents vendor ecosystem supporting machine restoration
medium · 'you just specify what company made your machine and how many balls and they take care of the rest for you... maybe 11 or 12 bucks from Titan Pinball. Highly recommend'
design_philosophy: Hardy's restoration approach prioritizes hidden detail work (lockdown bar refinishing, plexi gap reinforcement) as mark of quality craftsmanship, even when not visible during gameplay
high · 'this is one of my biggest pet peeves when people redo machines is if they spend no time and effort on making this look sexy... when you take that lockdown bar off... it's just a nice touch is all'
product_strategy: Extensive LED conversion on both playfield sides addressing original incandescent lighting; includes refreshed solder joints on lamp driver board to improve LED connection quality
high · Top side LED conversion complete; bottom side flashers being converted from incandescent to LED; poor solder connections identified and reflowed on multiple lamp driver poles
product_concern: Original backglass appears heavily soiled/deteriorated; requires extensive cleaning before installation, suggesting poor storage/maintenance history
medium · 'I almost put this on here didn't realize how dirty it was... the thing is so filthy my god... I messed up because now I've got to do all of this'
product_concern: Evidence of severe component deterioration in Batman '89: melted/fused flasher bulbs, burnt transistor (Q44), poor solder connections on lamp driver, missing mechanical spring, misaligned switches
positive(0.82)— Hardy expresses satisfaction with restoration progress, successful smoke tests, and quality of upgrades (LED conversion, PinSound, Titan decal). Frustration appears technical (burnt components, difficult cleaning) rather than systemic. Enthusiasm evident in problem-solving approach and attention to detail. Overall tone is optimistic about machine's prospects.
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.049
high · Melted flasher bulbs 'fused to the plastic', Q44 transistor 'burnt to a crisp', 'certain poles are very dim', switch 'hanging a good almost a solid inch outside of the wood rails', missing spring on buck
technology_signal: Aftermarket audio upgrade via PinSound system installation, replacing factory amplification with higher-capacity speakers (8-inch subwoofer) to maximize audio output on original board
high · 'since we've got the new speakers and everything going I probably need to turn this up... audio definitely does work it just has on the current factory board... we don't have the amplifiers to really push the new speakers especially the subwoofer'