Flipper Solar Ride

Solar Ride (Gottlieb, 1979): faults and System 1 replacement boards

Does your Solar Ride (Gottlieb, 1979) fail to start, are the displays stuck at zero or do the flippers and bumpers no longer respond? This Gottlieb pinball with a solar/space theme is built on System 1. Here are the typical faults reported on the forums and the battery-free replacement solutions.

Solar Ride overview

Released in 1979, the Solar Ride is a Gottlieb solid-state pinball built on System 1. Its theme highlights solar energy and a space-age, futuristic aesthetic.

  • Manufacturer: Gottlieb
  • Year: 1979
  • System: Gottlieb System 1
  • Type: solid state (alphanumeric displays)
  • Theme: solar energy, space, futuristic
Gottlieb System 1 MPU board — Solar Ride
The MPU board drives the entire Gottlieb System 1.

Common faults (System 1)

The Gottlieb System 1 shares a set of well-known weaknesses, regardless of the game:

  • Leaking battery: the NiCad battery soldered onto the MPU board leaks over time and corrodes traces and components. It's the number-one fault — remove it without delay.
  • Poor grounding: the original ground wiring is undersized and causes resets and erratic behaviour (the "ground mods" are practically mandatory).
  • Corroded connectors: the Molex connectors, especially the MPU↔Driver link (46 pins), lose contact and need re-pinning.
  • Power supply: unstable 5 V, tired bridge rectifiers and an overheating transformer lead to crashes.
  • Displays: digits that fade, flicker or stay frozen at zero.
Battery corrosion on a Gottlieb System 1 board — Solar Ride
Typical NiCad battery corrosion on System 1: the number-one fault to fix.

Solar Ride-specific problems (forums)

  • Refusal to start: two major causes — damage from a battery that leaked on the MPU, or a slam switch left open.
  • MPU↔Driver connector: the 46 pins of this link oxidise; re-pinning them (Molex tool required) is often essential.
  • Temperamental displays: everything stays at zero even when you add a credit, with flicker and an illegible score; sometimes the display returns to normal after a few minutes of warm-up.
  • No more flippers or bumpers: coils that don't respond, often on the Driver and grounds side, sometimes with a "Game Over" appearing mid-game.
  • Dead door buttons: the coin-door contacts no longer react (connector or ground).
  • Battery hard to remove: the onboard NiCad battery is soldered by several legs and tricky to take off — but it absolutely must go.

Solar Ride-compatible replacement boards

The Solar Ride is built on the Gottlieb System 1, a platform known to be fragile (leaking battery, weak grounds, oxidised connectors). Pinballs Store offers battery-free replacement solutions to make it reliable again:

  • Gosof — replacement sound board.
Gosof sound board for Gottlieb System 1 — Solar Ride
The Gosof sound board: battery-free replacement, Plug & Play installation.

For a CPU/Driver board dedicated to System 1, contact us: we'll point you to the best solution for your Solar Ride. Plug & Play installation, battery-free, free support.

FAQ — Solar Ride Gottlieb

What year was the Solar Ride released?
In 1979. It's a Gottlieb solid-state pinball on the System 1 platform.

Why won't my Solar Ride start?
Most often because of a battery that leaked on the MPU or a slam switch left open. Cleaning, checking the slam switches and a battery-free replacement board fix the problem for good.

Should I remove the battery from the MPU board?
Yes, immediately. The original NiCad battery eventually leaks and destroys the board. A battery-free replacement board permanently eliminates this risk.

Is there a replacement board for the Solar Ride?
Yes. Contact us for the right System 1 CPU/Driver solution; installation is Plug & Play, battery-free, with free support.

How long does it take to install a replacement board?
Installation is Plug & Play: a few minutes, no soldering, with tutorials and free support.

Does a battery-free board keep the settings and high scores?
Yes. Modern replacement boards use non-volatile memory: no more battery, no more corrosion, and the settings are kept when powered off.

Step-by-step diagnosis

  1. Power off, visual inspection: look for any battery or corrosion marks on the MPU of your Solar Ride; remove the NiCad battery if it is still present.
  2. Power supply: measure the 5 V and check that it reaches the MPU (re-solder the regulator or Q1 if the voltage drops).
  3. Grounds: apply the “ground mods” between the boards (CPU, Driver, power supply, sound).
  4. Connectors: re-pin the oxidised Molex connectors, especially the MPU↔Driver link.
  5. Displays: never plug or unplug a display while powered on; test with a known-good display.
  6. Final test: check start-up, credits, coils and displays; if needed, contact the free support.

See also

Sources

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