The Aussie Pinball Arcade

Aussie Pinball Forums => Technical Matters => Pinball Repairs / Problems & Assistance => Topic started by: PinPal on June 05, 2018, 05:15:31 PM

Title: Bally Flash Gordon Strobe
Post by: PinPal on June 05, 2018, 05:15:31 PM

Hi all, haven't posted here for a while but I would like sum help with my Flash Gordon strobe.
Was working fine until recently when I noticed it will only flash intermittently.
Tested it in lamp test mode and it will occasionally flash but not its usual one flash after another.
Took the board out and re flowed solder on the pins and checked the driver transistor on the master display board still no change.  !@#
Am not the best at measuring voltages so I think something has gone bad on the strobe board.


Any ideas


Thanks,


Pinpal....
Title: Re: Bally Flash Gordon Strobe
Post by: Crashramp on June 05, 2018, 10:16:25 PM
Sorry board work is not really my field of expertise either. I have read that the high voltage will remain on this board even after powering off so be careful when removing it. If you don’t have any luck repairing it replacement boards are available. I replaced mine about 4 years ago and it’s never missed a beat/flash!
Title: Re: Bally Flash Gordon Strobe
Post by: PinPal on June 05, 2018, 10:33:29 PM
Yes, I did read up on this board and was aware of the high voltage so I was careful when I re flowd the solder.
Did find a new bord available in the U.S. but as you no the postage cost is a killer.


Pinpal.
Title: Re: Bally Flash Gordon Strobe
Post by: Crashramp on June 05, 2018, 10:52:22 PM
Yes postage is ridiculous. Hopefully it’s just something simple with your board.
Title: Re: Bally Flash Gordon Strobe
Post by: Strangeways on June 20, 2018, 10:37:50 AM
Usually resoldering the connector pins solves intermittent issues as described.
Title: Re: Bally Flash Gordon Strobe
Post by: aurum on June 20, 2018, 04:42:53 PM
Just had a quick look at the schematic and there's not much that can go wrong. Can you power it up and carefully measure the voltage on the two caps - C2 & C3. They should be around 115*1.414 or approx 162V DC. High voltage capacitors like these tend to be the thing that fails.


Mike.
Schematic for anyone interested.