So after corrupting Warlock completely, it looks like I'm on the verge of taking another guy down the dangerous pinball path. I know he's already lurking here, so we'll see when he's ready to post...
Had a few friends over to play last Tuesday, and at the end of the evening, coincidentally enough while I was playing it, my left flipper went on my WH20. Investigations revealed that the linkages on the plunger had pretty much shredded itself, so I checked my parts bin, and lo and behold, I had what I needed to fix it - everything, that is, except time. It was already late, and there were pinball purchases to discuss.
I'm actually really enjoying the enabling I'm doing - I think it's helping me understand the kick Mike seems to get out of it, helping hook others up with our disease. It's also probably helping me avoid buying machines myself, as I'm spending someone else's money - all the fun, none of the bottom line hassle - for me, at least.
So Saturday afternoon, after watching the Jays' painful extra innings loss, I tackled the flipper. Rather than just replacing the broken linkage, I decided to do a full rebuild. May as well, right?
Watching guys like Menace do this repair in 20 minutes, I figure double that is a comfortable estimate for me, right?
Of course, it didn't take into account the fact that the linkage was clamped on the flipper bat so tightly that the whole thing was completely warped around it - (30 minutes to get loose), and that of course my stupid stubby fingers would drop a screw somewhere into the wiring harnesses (10-15 minute hunt to locate). The actual repair work itself probably actually did take 20 minutes, but the extra crap definitely added to my time - plus the fact that my 5 yr old was desperate to "help" Daddy, and I kept having to find jobs for her. At any rate, I eventually managed to get things working to my complete satisfaction, a much better result than the first flipper I rebuilt.
Then last night after bedtime, I decided it was time to start installing the external subs I'd been picking up. I started with WH20, because I'd played Menace's machine while picking up my sub from him earlier in the day, and noticed a real difference in the game (his has FF upgrades). I was extremely pleased with the result.
I basically attached speaker wire with alligator clips to the connectors of the existing subwoofer, loosened said subwoofer and passed the wire out the bottom of the cabinet, then tightened the subwoofer back in place. I ran the wire from both TSPP and WH20 into each side of the external subwoofer (A Polk PSW10, btw), and presto bingo, we have a serious sound upgrade in place!
Interesting note - I hooked up WH20 first, and tweaked the settings (volume and bass) until I was happy with the overall sound package. Adding TSPP next, and I have to say I was lucky I didn't wake up the kids during the test - which lasted all of twenty seconds before I realized that this was WAY TOO LOUD. So I have to compromise on where I want the settings between the two pins - otherwise TSPP will be unplayable during evening hours.
I'm settling in as very happy with my current lineup. Grand Lizard is an awesome addition, and the games I have in place are varied enough that I can "walk the line" and have fun and a completely different experience at each game. Loving my basement....
Now I just need a winning Jays team....