9/4/07 - Big update! I was tired of tripping over wires and having my cabinet look like its guts were spilled all over the floor, so I took on the task of mounting the computer. I decided to mount the computer, power supply and drive on a sheet of MDF that could be easily removed. Right now it sits in a channel I built into the sides of the cabinet, but I might put a couple of bolts with wing-nuts in there so the board won't fall out if the machine is tipped. I haven't finished tying down the wires yet, but I think it looks pretty nice.
I also installed the solid-state relay and that is working perfectly. It is triggered off of the 12v line from the computer power supply at the moment, so when the computer turns on the monitor and marquee light up along with it. This setup doesn't work for "suspend", as that line is live during suspend, but it will work for hibernate. And for regular "shut down", of course.
The entire machine now has only one plug, with all of the connections made inside the cabinet. Still need to figure out how/where I'm going to mount the speaker controls and transformer.
I picked up an AtomArcade board from a guy locally and started wiring that up as well. I wanted to get a tag strip like the I-PAC ships with, but couldn't find anything that lined up with the small spacing on this board. I'm sure digi-key has it but I decided to go with what I could find here. I picked up a few terminal strips from RS and am going to connect them with short wires. More time consuming, but it works.
Finally, I installed the speakers and they sound great. I had to pick up a shielded woofer because the Logitech one was really screwing with the monitor. The sound was good for music but it was a bit much for games, luckily I found that there is an equalizer built-in to the motherboard I'm using so I was able to get rid of some of the boomy-ness and over-saturated mids.
Remaining task list:
- Install cap kit and new flyback (already ordered from Bob Roberts)
- Finish removing vinyl side graphics, strip glue, fill, sand, prime, paint
- Design and build control panel
- Figure out a theme and color scheme