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Bartop Donkey Kong-Themed MAME
tiktock:
Hello,
This post is to kick off my project thread. I am nearly done completing this cabinet but I wanted to document the build for others.
A little history of my arcade skills: Until this point the only arcade building experience I have is with converting a broken Atart Breakout into a mame machine. This was a very sinple conversion, swapping in a 19" vertical monitor and X-arcade sticks. This bartop is a much more involved project as I'll be fabricating everything from scratch. I am lucky to have a full machine shop in my basement as I make custom knives. This means I have bandsaws, table saws, Jigsaws, routers, a lathe, a bridgeport milling machine, and every grinder, buffer and hand tool imaginable at my disposal. Most of my tools are way overkill for this project but have already come in handy.
My goal for this is as follows:
Build a single-player bartop arcade
* Fabricate everything from scratch
* Donkey-Kong Theme
* Switchable 4/8 way joystick
* Vertical Orientation (90% of the games I love are vertical)
Initial Harware:
Computer:
* P4 1.8Ghz Processor
* ITX-form motherboard
* 1 Gb RAM
Monitor:
* Haans-G 19" Widescreen
* Will be mounted vertically
Other Specs:
* Construction will be 1/2" and 3/4" MDF
* I will be using an I-PAC encoder
* I will be using a Mag-Stik Plus with the optional Ball top and because its 4/8 way switchable from above the control panel
Next post will detail some of the initial construction....
tiktock:
Here are a few pics of the inital construction. After doing some initial layout/design on paper, I quickly cut the uprights out of 3/4" MDF. I used 3/4" as I planned to do t-molding and wanted to be able to easilly source molding to fit. I also went ahead and cut the t-molding slots at this stage. Rather than much around with the router, I put the t-slot cutter into my milling machine, adjusted for height, and then simply moved the boards into the spinning cutter. This seemed much less error prone than moving the router around the board. The slot is dead center to about .001 tolerance, which should be plenty accurate for this project.
Once the uprights were cut out, I screwed/glued slices of wood which are what all attachment will connect through. This also allows me to 100% avoid any screws visible from the outside of the machine:
Here it is with the bottom attached:
Next post will document the construction of lighting and speakers.
tiktock:
I took a pair of computer speakers and went to won on them with my bandsaw, cutting everything away except the speakers themselves. I also disconnected the volume knob and set that aside for later integration. I will eventually have the volume knob avaialable from the outside of the cab.
I also hacked up an old under cabinet light and trimmed away excess housing to make it fit above the speakers. This is not pretty inside but works great!
Here are some pics of the mess inside as well as a quick mock-up of the marquee. I fabricated the brackets to hold the plexi out of aluminum:
Here you can see my volume knob now mounted outside the cab:
BobA:
Nice start. Looking forward to more of your build. :applaud:
leapinlew:
Is that the permanent marquee? It seems to be a bit short.
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