claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 · $0.015
Getaway restoration: GI wiring completed, continuity verified, topside reassembly begins.
For future full teardown rebuilds with extensive soldering, GI wiring should be done first, followed by solenoids, switches, and flashers to avoid obstruction.
high confidence · Cary Hardy learned this lesson during current restoration and explicitly states this workflow preference for future projects.
All playfield wiring (GI, switches, solenoids, flashers) has been completed and tested with multimeter continuity checks.
high confidence · Cary describes completing soldering work, performing organized continuity verification on both sides of playfield, and confirms tests passed.
Enlarged pilot holes on wood side rails to accommodate larger screws and prevent wood splitting during installation.
high confidence · Cary describes drilling out holes that previously matched old side rails, enlarging them for girthier screws.
“I almost wish I would have done this one first actually... if I'm having to do soldering and everything like that, I'm going to make sure I do the GI line first. And then I'll do solenoid switches and flashers because now I've got my GI essentially in place, but I've got a lot of soldering to do and a lot of stuff is in the obstructing my view to get to it so this is gonna suck”
Cary Hardy@ 4:28 — Reflects on workflow optimization and articulates a lesson learned about project sequencing for complex restoration work.
“I did it I have wired the entire back of this playfield It is done Here we have GI switch solenoids everything is soldered on”
Cary Hardy@ 4:52 — Marks completion of major underside wiring milestone on the restoration.
“I don't want to short. So that's just verification purposes on my part.”
Cary Hardy@ 7:14 — Explains the reasoning behind thorough continuity testing before reassembly.
community_signal: Detailed documentation of restoration workflow challenges and solutions suggests value for other restorers in community learning from methodology.
medium · Cary explicitly identifies and articulates workflow optimization lesson (GI first, then solenoids/switches/flashers) for future projects, indicating knowledge sharing intent.
product_concern: Soldering iron tips break frequently during restoration work, forcing improvisation with homemade tips from house wire gauge.
high · Cary states tips 'essentially break' after heavy use and he's 'out of tips' so he's 'made my own' and will 'continue to do' this approach.
positive(0.75)— Cary expresses frustration with tedious soldering work and workflow challenges, but maintains enthusiasm for project completion. Satisfaction evident upon finishing major milestones (full wiring completion, successful testing). Professional and pragmatic tone throughout.
youtube_groq_whisper · $0.030