Oh, poor EM section... time for some more love
I bought my first EM almost a year to the day last October. A Centigrade 37 no less!
My love affair with these classic Gottlieb wedgeheads has been strong ever since and I have 6 of them to date. I find I sometimes play them more than my modern pins.
This C37 was in fantastic shape and I was determined to make it a showpiece of my collection. It arrived with just over 60,000 plays (most games of this era are well past 100,000). The playfield was super clean and I have since touched it up, filled in cupped inserts and clearcoated it.
Mechanically it was pretty solid. Just needed a couple of little tweaks.
The only real flaw on the game was a very badly faded left and front side. The pink was almost completely washed out.
Now that I have the playfield done and ready to re-assemble, I started upon the task of re-painting the pink. I decided to only do the one colour because the rest of the cabinet was in really nice shape.
I spent a lot of time reading Clay's guides and despite his advice, I figured I would try using the same frisket masking film that I use for airbrushing playfields... well, this was a mistake.
The photos below look okay, but let me say that the paint got everywhere. I had to stick the film to the cabinet, cut the film (thereby cutting the cabinet) and then spray. The paint bled underneath and I had to spend a lot of time with some mineral spirits and Q-tips just to get it looking okay.
I was also not crazy about the glossy appearance of the Krylon paint I used when compared to the rest of the cabinet.
I bought my first EM almost a year to the day last October. A Centigrade 37 no less!
My love affair with these classic Gottlieb wedgeheads has been strong ever since and I have 6 of them to date. I find I sometimes play them more than my modern pins.
This C37 was in fantastic shape and I was determined to make it a showpiece of my collection. It arrived with just over 60,000 plays (most games of this era are well past 100,000). The playfield was super clean and I have since touched it up, filled in cupped inserts and clearcoated it.
Mechanically it was pretty solid. Just needed a couple of little tweaks.
The only real flaw on the game was a very badly faded left and front side. The pink was almost completely washed out.
Now that I have the playfield done and ready to re-assemble, I started upon the task of re-painting the pink. I decided to only do the one colour because the rest of the cabinet was in really nice shape.
I spent a lot of time reading Clay's guides and despite his advice, I figured I would try using the same frisket masking film that I use for airbrushing playfields... well, this was a mistake.
The photos below look okay, but let me say that the paint got everywhere. I had to stick the film to the cabinet, cut the film (thereby cutting the cabinet) and then spray. The paint bled underneath and I had to spend a lot of time with some mineral spirits and Q-tips just to get it looking okay.
I was also not crazy about the glossy appearance of the Krylon paint I used when compared to the rest of the cabinet.