Thanks for the info guys. Since most of what 1Up said went over my head (I know very little about electronics, resistors, etc.). Is there a "dummies" solution for this, i.e. some LEDs that I can get at Radio shack that I can wire directly to the power supply feed? I don't know anything about how I would put a resistor inline or such. Don't get me wrong, I don't want to appear to be ungrateful, I just know my experience level isn't up to what 1Up is describing. I guess the safe bet would be to just use the +5volt line and be done with it.
Thanks!
If you want a plug-n-play solution, you'd have to look for 5V LEDs with built-in resistors. I'm not sure where you can get them, try the RadioShack.com site. What you really need is high-intensity LEDs, and I don't know if they make those in 5V. It's very simple to just solder a resistor to one of the LED power lines, I could look it up and tell you exactly which LEDs and resistors I used. It might be a little more trouble than you want, but once it's done, you'll never have to go searching for bulbs to work in your coin door again.
Okay, here is the exact LED I used:
http://www.radioshack.com/product.asp?catalog%5Fname=CTLG&category%5Fname=CTLG%5F010%5F012%5F002%5F009&product%5Fid=276%2D307 Get 2 of them, get a small circuit board (
http://www.radioshack.com/product.asp?catalog%5Fname=CTLG&category%5Fname=CTLG%5F005%5F014%5F003%5F000&product%5Fid=276%2D148) and cut off one of the corners by scoring with a utility knife or x-acto across a row of holes, then snapping off the piece.
Now you need to solder the LEDs to the ends of the circuit boards AWAY from the mounting holes. You want to have the LEDs sticking up about 1/4" from the boards. You'll need 2 different colors of wire to hookup the LEDs, so you can tell negative from positive. Solder your positive wire (red is a good color) to the longer lead of one of the LEDs. This is easier if you push the wire and the lead into the same hole on the circuit board, then solder them together on the copper side of the board. Solder a different color wire (black is good) to the shorter (negative) LED lead in the same way. Now you need to do the same for the other LED and small circuit board.
Finally, you hook the two LEDs together in parallel. This just means that the positive lead of one LED gets connected to the positive lead on the other LED, and negative to negative. Now, just solder a 100 ohm resistor (the stripes on a 100 ohm resitor are BROWN-BLACK-BLACK-BLACK) onto the end of your positive wire. Solder another piece of wire onto the other end of the resistor, and cover the resistor and its leads with some electrical tape or heat shrink tubing. You can now hook the whole thing up to a PC drive power extension cord inside your computer. Hook the positive wire to the red wire (+5v) on the extension cord, and the negative wire to the black (ground) wire. The LEDs now draw power from the PC, and the resistor keeps them from burning out (dropping the 5v power source to 1.7v).

If your coin door is like mine, the light socket is held to the chassis by a bracket and small screw. Remove the brackets, and screw your circuit boards to the chassis using the board's mounting hole. Done!