claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.014
Cary Hardy diagnoses Batman '89 pinball issues: bad ground, fried Q44 transistor, mechanical problems.
The Batman machine's power plug lacks proper grounding, which is critical for pinball machine operation
high confidence · Hardy explicitly identifies and addresses the missing ground connection at the start of the overhaul
The left buck solenoid is not firing due to a failed MOSFET (Q44) on the control board
high confidence · Hardy performs voltage and ohms testing, identifies Q44 as visibly damaged, and confirms the coil itself is mechanically sound
A missing spring component in the shooter lane switch is likely causing repeated activation and solenoid burnout
medium confidence · Hardy observes the switch resting incorrectly and notes 'there should be a spring in here to keep it from resting like that'
Data East machines provide poor internal access, necessitating removal of the playfield to rotisserie for comprehensive work
high confidence · Hardy states 'these data east they don't give you easy access back here inside the cabinet' and moves the playfield to rotisserie
The machine had significant dust and loose hardware accumulation inside the cabinet
high confidence · Hardy performs extensive vacuuming and finds loose hardware at the bottom requiring inventory
“proper ground is very important especially especially for dealing with something such as a pinball machine if you want some really weird stuff going on then have a faulty ground”
Cary Hardy @ ~2:00 — Core diagnostic principle: emphasizes why proper grounding is foundational to pinball machine repair
“We've got a rotten dog board, so that's a plus on that. And everything else looks to be OEM”
Cary Hardy @ ~5:30 — Initial assessment of board condition; 'rotten dog board' appears to be a colloquialism for a specific board type or condition
“I don't even know where the other half of that transistor is at”
Cary Hardy @ ~12:00 — Visual confirmation of catastrophic Q44 MOSFET failure; indicates severe burnout
“these data east they don't give you easy access back here inside the cabinet so best thing is just to take the damn thing out so I can walk around it like so and access every nook and cranny from every angle”
Cary Hardy @ ~14:30 — Design critique and practical troubleshooting approach; explains methodology choice
“If you find loose hardware at the bottom of a cabinet I'm sure it went to the machine at some point but it looks like everything's intact”
Cary Hardy @ ~21:00 — General troubleshooting wisdom about cabinet inspection and parts tracking
product_concern: Batman '89 machine exhibits multiple electrical and mechanical defects: missing ground connection, failed MOSFET, missing spring component, shooter lane misalignment, and significant dust/debris accumulation indicating inadequate maintenance history
high · Visual inspection and systematic testing reveal Q44 transistor damage, improperly grounding power connection, missing spring in shooter switch, and extensive interior contamination
technology_signal: Data East machines have design limitations that make internal access and comprehensive repair difficult, requiring removal of playfield to rotisserie for effective troubleshooting
high · Hardy explicitly states 'these data east they don't give you easy access back here inside the cabinet' and moves entire playfield to rotisserie for accessibility
neutral(0.5)— Hardy maintains a methodical, professional tone throughout. There is some minor frustration with missing components (broken security bits, missing spring, picking the lock) but this is offset by systematic problem-solving and satisfaction with diagnostic progress. The overall sentiment is solution-oriented and matter-of-fact.
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.035