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Well done Gibo, tricky one there. I always check EOS operation by pushing the slug in rather than moving the flipper bat, but I am not sure this would have helped in your situation?Have to ask, however, how you were frying coils rather than blowing fuses - didn't have a nail in there instead of a fuse did you cheersIan
As an aside, always worth checking all fuses in a newly acquired pinball machine - there is absolutely no guarantee that the fuses are rated correctly.
Quote from: ajlaird on August 28, 2009, 07:23:26 PMAs an aside, always worth checking all fuses in a newly acquired pinball machine - there is absolutely no guarantee that the fuses are rated correctly.Why? Screwdrivers work fine for me - never melted one yet!
After a bit of quiet time at the shed today its fixed, it was an extremely worn flipper pawl causing the problem,with the playfield in the upright position activating the flipper the EOS would open no worries and stay open but when the playfield was back in its rest position the weight of the flipper bat and pressure on the EOS would close it again causing the coil to heat up,in hindsight probably should of picked it up earlier