Crabescent Dithering
Posts tagged Arcade Cabinet
Arcade Cabinet Project: Days Four and Five
Jun 8th
Things are progressing, a little slower than I was expecting, but hey, I’m learning! It’s OK!
Firstly, I attempted to make the bottom access panel without using a frame. The door was too heavy! Major sagging and bad alignment issues. Even with the Euro hinges I only got about a 45 degree opening angle. Not good enough. Kept plugging away at it regardless and ended up with a result that I didn’t like. Well, as they say, there is an easy way and a correct way to do these things.
After some thought, I disassembled the access door and made a frame out of pine, glued and screwed it to the frame and put an overlaid door on top of the frame. Not only is this much simpler to align, but the overlay covers and minor alignment issues nicely. Plus, since the door is singificantly smaller the hinges support the weight much better. I used self-closing hinges so that also eliminates another step of the process. Nice.
Next, I cut the piece for the speaker panel. Started with just a normal rectangle and then did a 45 degree bevel cut down one side (to the best of my ability) with the Jigsaw. Worked out to be reasonable accurate, a tiny bit off in the middle of the cut but nothing some sanding won’t hide. Measured and created templates for the speakers, drilled some 1/2 inch holes and then just kept enlarging with the jigsaw until they were the right size for the speakers to fit in there snugly. Looks really cool with the speakers in – they have a bout 4mm clearance. Need to decide on a cuttable, attractive faceplace material to hide the 1-2mm gap around the edges of the holes, though.
Also cut and mounted the marquee retainer piece. No complications here, just a rectangular piece of wood!
Here’s what it looks like now:
Hard at work!
Arcade Cabinet Project: Day Three
Jun 1st
Third day of actual construction and things are going well!
Not much to say, managed to get the sides nice and even and fit the blocks and trays. Did a lot of sanding to fix minor measuring errors. So far nothing more than about 1mm here and there, so hopefully that won’t have a significant effect on it. The whole deal certainly is starting to look a lot more like an arcade cabinet now and it’s quite interesting to get a sense of the scale of the thing. It will be quite comfortable for two people to stand at, I think!
Next up I will likely be trying to install the rest of the exterior panels and trying to figure out some way of making the access doors work nicely.
-JJ
Arcade Cabinet Project: The Introduction
May 29th
I should be recording this.
Okay, so, for the longest time I’ve been interested in the idea of owning an arcade cabinet for MAME, fighting games and general gaming tomfoolery. For the longest time this hasn’t been even concievable – living in an apartment pretty much makes it impossible. Buying one outright is ridiculously expensive, even at the lower end of the scale. So, how about making one? Well, in order to build one you need several power tools that are inhibitively expensive if you don’t already own them, then you need a lot of time. Oh, also, you need a lot of room to work in. You also need to meticulously plan almost every phase of its construction. For me, this taxes every area of skill I consider myself to be proficient in, and some of those I am not. My experience in design, IT, illustration and research need to somehow work in harmony with my almost complete inablilty to do complicated mathematics, woodworking, technical drawing and electronics over a prolonged period of time to somehow come out with what I am after. It is easily the most complicated and challenging task I have assigned myself. I am also incredibly excited about it, and have managed to keep myself dedicated to it thus far.
But.
Even if you have all of that, you more importantly need to have an awesome wife who will be perfectly okay with having an angular black monolith with knobs sticking out of it in the middle of her living room. Fortunately, that box has a neat tick in it. And a few underlines. And a little sparkly star sticker.
Things are progressing decently well. So far I’ve done about two months of planning and two days of construction, leaving me with two of these:
Cabinet Side
Which, if we are honest. Doesn’t look like much. Working within the limitation I have I am pretty pleased with how it has gone so far, though. It is good progress, however, given that (I think) making these two sides will be the most complicated part of the whole construction – although likely not the most work intensive.
I am working with some restrictions. The main thing is trying (and generally failing) to keep this as inexpensive as possible. I am hoping to do all of the construction for the cabinet with only a jigsaw and a drill, which I have been told a few times is totally ridiculous and impossible. This is the kind of challenge I am up for. But, aside from that, for those who are interested, here are some (in some cases speculatory) statistics about the cabinet plan:
Dimensions:
Height: 6′
Width: 2’6
Depth: 2’6
Main construction materials: 1″ Hardwood Ply, 1″ Solid Poplar, 1.5″x1.5″ Solid Poplar blocks, 1/16″ acrylic sheeting for bezel and control panel cover
Audio/Video:
Display: 24″ ASUS 16:9 LCD
Sound: Logitech X-240 2.1 PC Speakers
Control:
Sanwa JLF joysticks
HAPP Long Competition Style buttons
UltimARC i-PAC keyboard emulator
Some random keyboard and mouse
Some random computer cobbled from parts around the house etc.
“Features”:
Interchangable control panel
Hinged control panel
All controls are “quick disconnect”-able
Cabinet door access on front and possibly on the back
Area to put your drink (possibly cup holders, later on.. :D)
Rollout keyboard tray
Doesn’t take up much room, for a cabinet!