Let's just break it down.....
What Worked:
The detachable wheel system I came up with really worked well. I just cut the wheel off from the base and attached pvc pipe fittings to each end. The pieces already stayed in place rather well via friction, but I drilled a hole through the assembled shaft and put a cotter pin in there to keep the two halves connected. This allowed me to remove the analog wheel when the optical wheel is in use or install my homemade star wars yoke. The yoke also worked quite well btw.
My miniature view buttons also worked well. The smaller cluster makes for an easier mount in a smaller dash and I think I might actually prefer them to the original.
I think the smoked plexi and old coffee cup rings for the dials worked quite well. It's a shame I never finished the software to light them up.
Finally the rig did collapse quite well, which was the main goal at the time.
What Sort of Worked:
The optical wheel, which inserts in the center dial worked pretty good but it had one issue... I didn't have the sensor pcb mounted well and it'd occasionally scrape the encoder wheel. It's currently off the tube atm... I now have a 3d printer so I'll design a new mount for the next rig.
The lighting and controls hooked up to a teensy worked well, but I never got around to finishing the software or fully programming all the scripts in mamehooker. It worked for Offroad thunder, Outrun fxt and a few other games I bothered to setup. The main reason I didn't finish is the fact that the teensy and attached buttons/controls weren't easy to remove... so I had to program on the racing rig's pc... which was rather awkward.
The powered seat was also a partial success. It was fine for sitting, but rather heavy and ugly. When I started this project my grandma didn't need a lot of help physically so it was fine. Now that I'm lifting on her everyday it's just a pain in the butt. For now I'll keep it but I'm actively looking for a replacement.
The analog shifter, made from a pc raider joystick and some L brackets worked surprisingly well for what it was. The only problem is it shredded the rubber washers I used for stops, the return spring wasn't strong enough and the software I wrote for it had a slight bug regarding 6th gear and I never bothered to fix it because I play 90% of the racing games in automatic mode. I'm going to do a brand new shifter build based upon the th8a shifter in the future because I want a shifter for daytona and those older hi/low shifter games.
What Failed:
The overall end look wasn't at all what I had intended to do. the plan was to cover the whole thing in polished metal with rivets ect. similar to a WWII era plane/race car. The problem was, as the years rolled on my free time lessened, and I just didn't want to work on that sort of thing in what little time I have to myself. In addition I totally screwed up the stain, which each piece of wood ending up a different color.
The led array dials I created for the smoked plexi inserts are also a failure because I never installed them. I soldered them up, put a test program on there to make sure they worked and just never got around to it. This is mainly because I wanted to use them more like a secondary monitor, which again required a lot of arduino programming that I just never got around to.
Overall I just feel that I tried to do to much. The new rig will be scaled back and I'll start a new build thread soon.