claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.016
DIY 3D-printed gong mod installation for Stern King Kong Pro machines
King Kong Pro models have a plastic gong without ball-blocking mechanics, while Premium and Limited Edition models have a physical gong mechanism
high confidence · Gary states the Pro gong doesn't reject the ball—it goes in and kicks it up, contrasting with Premium/LE versions
The 3D-printed gong mod is available under Creative Commons license and cannot be sold
high confidence · Gary explicitly states: 'These models are available to anybody under the Creative Commons. They can't be sold'
The 3D-printed mod doesn't change gameplay mechanics but improves visual interaction
high confidence · Gary clarifies: 'it doesn't change the mechanics of the gameplay because it is not a mechanism, but it gives a little more interaction with the game'
PETG plastic requires adhesion promoter before painting because paint won't naturally stick to its surface
high confidence · Gary explains: 'Things don't like to stick to it. So you actually want to do some additional prep' and recommends adhesion promoter
The gong was 3D-printed in polycarbonate at 100% fill for durability since the ball will contact it
high confidence · Gary states: 'I printed the gong out of polycarbonate at 100% fill, so it makes it nice and strong and robust since the ball is going to be touching it'
“Are you bored of that plastic stern pro gong? We were. And we did something about it and you can too.”
Gary (Wild Dog Arcade) @ Opening — Sets up the motivation for the mod—dissatisfaction with the flat plastic gong on Pro models
“it doesn't change the mechanics of the gameplay because it is not a mechanism, but it gives a little more interaction with the game”
Gary @ Early in mod explanation — Clarifies that the mod is purely aesthetic/decorative and doesn't alter core gameplay
“Things don't like to stick to it. So you actually want to do some additional prep.”
Gary @ Painting techniques section — Practical advice on painting PETG plastic—highlights a common challenge in DIY modding
“I find it makes a better visually appealing item rather than starting with a really dark base and trying to lighten it up. I think it looks better if you start light.”
Gary @ Painting philosophy section — Reflects Gary's design philosophy on color layering for visual impact
community_signal: Active homebrew/mod community creating and sharing 3D-printable upgrades via Pinside forums under Creative Commons licensing
high · Gary credits anonymous Pinside community member for the mod design; shares installation walkthrough to encourage broader adoption
design_philosophy: Pro tier cost reduction achieved through mechanical feature removal (gong becomes decorative only), creating aftermarket mod opportunity
high · Pro explicitly lacks the physical gong mechanism present in Premium/LE; community responds with decorative 3D-printed alternative
product_strategy: Stern King Kong Pro/Premium/LE tiers have mechanically different gong implementations: Pro has static plastic piece, Premium/LE have active ball-blocking mechanism
high · Gary contrasts Pro gong that 'doesn't reject' and 'goes in and kicks it up' with physical mechs in higher tiers
technology_signal: Increasing viability of 3D printing for pinball playfield components and toys; enables community mod ecosystem
high · 3D-printed gong mod uses polycarbonate for durability against ball contact; demonstrates practical printability for functional game components
youtube_auto_sub · $0.000