lothian
Pinball Wizard
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2022
- Messages
- 13
- Reaction score
- 7
- Points
- 10
- Favorite Pinball Machine
- @y%u^{NYsH?H4Jv~
Much has been written about various flipper coil issues within this forum and others. The consensus among those knowledgeable of technical pinball stuff seems to be that poor flipper performance typically indicates a problem with something upstream in the circuit because coils rarely go bad and never get weak. Fine.
So what causes a spongy flipper? I've got one. When a ball smacks a flipper in the up position (cabinet button depressed) the thing curtseys noticeably before bouncing back up. When I push on this flipper in the up position it genuinely feels spongy.
I'm definitely new to working under a pinball playfield, so I have zero ability to recognize "ah HA!" I checked the usual list of mechanical whatnots and none are the cause. The coil is getting 25v but I think it's supposed to be 28v; high and low winding resistance values are in spec. Could lower-than-required voltage would make a coil weak? Would three volts make that much difference? Do I need to investigate the driver board? Is there a mechanical issue I've over-looked...
So what causes a spongy flipper? I've got one. When a ball smacks a flipper in the up position (cabinet button depressed) the thing curtseys noticeably before bouncing back up. When I push on this flipper in the up position it genuinely feels spongy.
I'm definitely new to working under a pinball playfield, so I have zero ability to recognize "ah HA!" I checked the usual list of mechanical whatnots and none are the cause. The coil is getting 25v but I think it's supposed to be 28v; high and low winding resistance values are in spec. Could lower-than-required voltage would make a coil weak? Would three volts make that much difference? Do I need to investigate the driver board? Is there a mechanical issue I've over-looked...