Hi everyone!
Yesterday we took a day off from work so we could continue on our 1st (of hopefully more to come) arcade cabinets.
We have made a list of most important things that we have to do before we can put the machine on it's final location:
(most is in Dutch, but some stuff is readable I hope: left = todo, right = shopping list)
We started off by making small 'lines' with a frees inside the front of the side panels. This will be for the T-molding!
Especially the corners are hard to get right, because you have to keep the 'bovenfrees' at the right angle in comparison to the panel you are doing.
When that was done, I started doing putting in the T-molding. It was a very tight fit, but with some rough handwork (since I couldn't find a rubber hammer) one side was done in 10-15 minutes.
Once my friend was back, he showed me where the hammer lay, and I did the other side in < 5 minutes
. The only problem we had here, as you can see on the photograph, is the T-molding near the location of the control panel. Since there are two bends quite next to eachother, the T-molding tempts to bend easily. Which makes it hard to keep in place between the corners. We had to use some glue and clamps to hold it in place. That too, the first time failed, but secondly, with some other glue, worked out.
Mind that actually the 'inside' corners are the toughest. It is impossible to not leave a little space undone with the T-molding there. So that will have to be filled and at the end, painted. Nothing will be noticable
.
After that, before we put it "back on solid ground" (awesome song btw
), we nailed in some feet for our cabinet, so the floor wouldn't get too much damage from it lateron. And also because the cabinet will be quite a lot more portable with the feet underneath it.
Then we drilled to quite large holes for a few computer extention possibilities (LAN, Powercord). We made the holes large so we could fit a plate behind it where the connections could easily be clicked into.
The powerbutton (with lighting)! Had to move it a little from the design as you can see. That's because the saw couldn't be made so close to the edge of the cabinet. Fortunately this appears to be the most common location power buttons were placed back in the arcade days. Note that we first had to cut a 220v block so we could connect and solder two of the cables to the switch and connect the other end, which goes to the inverted outlet we are going to make on the rear of the cabinet (photo above).
Next we started on fitting the rear panels in the cabinet. We want them to be easily clampable and also easily removable, for easy access...
. First screwed a small strip onto the panel so it would be held in place on the bottom.
Next, we screwed in a small plank on both sides and for both panels, where they could rest against.
Also you can see the 220v block where we will connect the PC, monitor, speakers and lighting to.
Rear panels in place, but not holded yet so they can sill fall out now
. Made some holes in them for cooling the monitor and for easy opening.
Mind the black cornerpiece. Had to make a few of those to hold the marquee in place when it arrives
.
And (yes!!
), the new location (added actually) for the two buttons that couldn't be connected. So now they are in a nice position to also do some pinball with them.
Now, when trying to fit the control panel again before making the 'scharnier' (bending piece), it appeared the plexiglass was a little too wide, so we had to carefully shave off some of the edges.
After that was done, we could put the control panel in place (or hang it for now since we didn't have place holders laying around.. I will be getting those this afternoon).
The control panel has to, ofcourse be able to open and close because we will have to put the artwork underneath and in case of failure of any kind, it will be easily accesible this way.
Final job of the day, was putting in place the volume control (which comes from the subwoofer). I wanted to make this a non-visible feature, so we decided to place it behind the coindoor. So once you open that, voilá!
'Till next time TOC folks
Main PC: Intel i5 4670K - 8gb - GTX660 - 120gb Samsung SSD - 1x 2TB sata III
Shovel Knight Aracde: Intel i3 2100, 2gb, HD4350
Donkey Kong Arcade: E6350, 2gb, HD4350, 32gb sata III stick, 1x 320gb sata II
LAN PC: Intel NUC i3, 4gb ddr3, Intel HD3000
Retro PC: P1 166mhz, 64mb, Diamond Stealth II, Voodoo 2, ATA-66 700mb
"2001 - A Retro odyssee PC": P3 S 1.4Ghz, 768mb, LeadTek GF3 Ti500, Matrox G200+ (4x dvi), 3x Seagate 40gb ATA raid 5
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