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Main => Everything Else => Topic started by: rampy on April 08, 2003, 04:20:59 pm

Title: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: rampy on April 08, 2003, 04:20:59 pm
*shrug*...  the poll isn't as important as to just open up the floor for comments to this heated topic... =P

Rampy

PS thread that inspired the poll (http://www.arcadecontrols.org/yabbse/index.php?board=10;action=display;threadid=6365)
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: anthony691 on April 08, 2003, 04:53:59 pm
I think people can do whatever they want with thier cabs, and it is not anyones place to tell them to (It is reasonable to ask them not to, but not to TELL them not to) (It is also reasonable to convince them they made a mistake or let them know you (and many others) disagree with what you did, but once they aknolage this it's time to move on!)


Note: I would NEVER, EVER MAME a Classic!!!!!!! I wouldn't event consider it; but people can do whatever they want with thier cabs!
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hevnsnt on April 08, 2003, 05:58:14 pm
well anyone who knows me, knows I voted.. Its mine and I can do what I want! :)
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Brad Lee on April 08, 2003, 05:58:30 pm
Without even clicking, I can geuss that thread above is about the guy with the Tempest.. I did the same thing(gasp!) and converted an empty Tempest cabinet to mame. I understand that it is a classic and prized by many, so I kept things completely reversible in the event that anyone should ever approach me. There was nothing in it when I got it, and it could go back to that in about 10 minutes

The other part of me says that Tempest has always been one of my personal favorites, as much for the design(the monolithic slope and terrifying demons ARE pretty damn cool) as the game itself. I like the fact that my conversion is pretty unique in the field for the reason that nobody wants to use this cabinet for this purpose.

I am leaning more now than ever to getting some repro sideart for it and keeping to the theme when I eventually do a marquee and some CPOverlays

If I were of a mind to make a large 4-player CP, I would definitely look to either finding a generic cab or building- rather than tearing this apart to make things fit
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SirPoonga on April 08, 2003, 06:19:17 pm
I would mame a classic, but not in the sense most people think of.  With the advent of arcadevga and jpac all I would do is just plug a computer in, no changing the cabinet.

Some of these cabs people modify are classic cabs which year by passing year get harder to find.  ESPECIALLY if you picked up a working pcb and want to refurbish.
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SirPoonga on April 08, 2003, 06:22:12 pm
well anyone who knows me, knows I voted.. Its mine and I can do what I want! :)

Hey, have you checked your PM?  Still wondering if you would be willing to trade that digdug pcb.

Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Sasquatch! on April 08, 2003, 06:46:46 pm
I checked "If you're real careful, maybe".  

Using a classic cab to play MAME ain't no big deal, but I disagree with making irrersible changes to it (cutting into it) to do so.
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Brax on April 08, 2003, 07:15:59 pm
Without even clicking, I can geuss that thread above is about the guy with the Tempest..

Nope he killed a Dig Dug... The Tempest guy is a different Mutilator.
And then of course there's the Defender guy.....

*sigh*
It seems the more people that get into this, the more classic cabs get destroyed.

And I don't want to hear some dumb arguement about it going into the trash if you didn't kill it yourself. You found it, it's your job to preserve it or pass it along to someone else who wants to. Its not all that hard.

I'm done.

I've made a cocktail from scratch. I'm going to make a 1up replica. Then you know what I'm going to do? I just thought of this.... I have the skills now.... I'm going to rescue a cabinet. I may keep it or I may sell it after restoration but I'm going to preserve a piece of gaming history because I get so much enjoyment out of them. Why don't you do the same?

ok, now I'm done.
*sits down*
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Xphile on April 08, 2003, 09:15:12 pm
<snip>
Then you know what I'm going to do? I just thought of this.... I have the skills now.... I'm going to rescue a cabinet. I may keep it or I may sell it after restoration but I'm going to preserve a piece of gaming history because I get so much enjoyment out of them. Why don't you do the same?

ok, now I'm done.
*sits down*

that's a damn good idea..I'm proud of being able to bring my space harrier cab back from the dead - and it's not even a true blue golden-age classic!

 it's a distinctive cab, sure.. the Sprite-based 3D gameplay was one of the best(and one of the last) but I'd love to pick up a true "golden age of arcade" cab and bring back from the dead.. But in all likelihood, I'm prolley gonna pick up a non-working semi-classic (won't even be able to afford a golden ager...maybe silver or bronze..:-)

...we have *one* auction company around here once or twice a year. with maybe 50-100 cabs each time...the prices do get up there, anything recent (or even just >27" monitor ) - or old (even for the classic dead cabs..)

middle of the road cabs are dirt cheap tho'.. non-descript 19" -25" neo-geo/ jamma conversion cabs go anywhere from $25- $150 working, so it's a mamer's paradise..

I wanna rescue a cab!  :'(

Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: anthony691 on April 08, 2003, 09:37:56 pm
Maybe we should all restore a cab, you know; I think it would be cool. What better way to preserve the classics? We could make it into a gentleman's contest to see who can turn the worst cab into the best. We can all also each make some cash off of this.
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: rampy on April 08, 2003, 09:59:35 pm
On one hand, I think it's just smelly old  particle board and not that important...  Does it really matter in the grand scheme of things?

BUT I have a visceral reaction whenever I see a MAME'd star wars or a sawed up dig dug, or butchered Tempest, tron,  or *Gasp* mix-mashed 4 player MAME button factory explosion Mr. Do conversion (thankfully haven't seent THAT yet).... but probably  just get upset/naseus cause those are my favorite cab(s) -- I don't shed a tear for  a MAME'd kangaroo or rally-x or whatever...

*Shrug*  --- so i'm a preservationist, but i'm not sure why...  it's as if 1000 classic cabs cried out at once and then were silenced... =P

rampy
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: u_rebelscum on April 09, 2003, 03:08:13 am
"One man's trash is another's treasure."  
"Another" can't tell "one man" what to do or not to do, but "one man" would be stupid not to sell the "trash" at a treasure's price to "another."  Either that, or a cold hearted rich person, or an ignorant poor person who never will be rich.

If it's in perfect condition, I'd put a small computer with arcadeVGA and jpac in there like SirPoonga said.  If you do any irrersible changes to a classic, you're killing a great investment.  You can make money by selling the perfect classic cab and buying two working generics.

If it's in good shape, I'd either restore or trade it with someone who will restore for a generic or parts.  Maybe (probably, actually) use it as a template first, though, and build my own.

If the classic cab is in really bad shape that none will trade for it, I'd say duplicate it and retire the old, broken pile of wood and let it rest in peace.  :'(
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SONIC on April 09, 2003, 05:31:47 pm
Voted "It's my cab..."!
Yes! I would might MAME a classic cab, but only if the game itself didn't mean that much to me! Cabs I would never do anything to but polish are cabs like Bubble Bobble, Outrun, R-Type, Jackal or other games that meant allot to me as a kid! But if I became a Tetris or somewhat other cab where the original game didn't mean sh*t to me, I would have no bad feelings maming the sh*t out of it :D Call me terrorist, but in the end everything the most of us seek is the original arcade feel about playing the old games, and a cab that looks seriously good in our living-room :) But if I could get hold of a Bubble Bobble... sweet jesus :) Would let it stay like it was for ever, that's for sure!!!
Btw... now I'm talking about Bubble Bobble... how comes it lags at times when playing 2 players??? I mean, it can't be THAT demanding, or???

Cheers doods!!!

Keep it real, and don't hate eachother :)

Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Brax on April 09, 2003, 05:38:33 pm
Voted "It's my cab..."!
Yes! I would might MAME a classic cab, but only if the game itself didn't mean that much to me! Cabs I would never do anything to but polish are cabs like Bubble Bobble, Outrun, R-Type, Jackal or other games that meant allot to me as a kid! But if I became a Tetris or somewhat other cab where the original game didn't mean sh*t to me, I would have no bad feelings maming the sh*t out of it :D Call me terrorist, but in the end everything the most of us seek is the original arcade feel about playing the old games, and a cab that looks seriously good in our living-room :) But if I could get hold of a Bubble Bobble... sweet jesus :) Would let it stay like it was for ever, that's for sure!!!
Btw... now I'm talking about Bubble Bobble... how comes it lags at times when playing 2 players??? I mean, it can't be THAT demanding, or???

Cheers doods!!!

Keep it real, and don't hate eachother :)



Didn't you kill the Defender?

If so, I need to find myself a nice Bubble Bobble......... and put an AXE in it! *grin*

No hard feelings.  ;D
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Chris on April 09, 2003, 05:54:36 pm
The question, of course, is "what is a classic"?  This answer may be different for everybody...

My cabinet started life as a Super Contra.  It's in just about the most generic looking cabinet I've seen, so I had no problem MAMEing it.  But cabinets that can be recognized on sight as Defender, Galaxian, Pac-Man, Tempest...  well, I might MAME it, but only in such a way that a complete reversal and restoration was possible: restore the sideart and marquee, store the CP and bezel, and don't cut into the cabinet.  More likely, I'd try to trade for a generic cab.  Since I have a MAME cab now, if I came upon one of these classic cabs I'd probably attempt a full restoration.

--Chris
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hevnsnt on April 09, 2003, 11:36:06 pm
So what would you think if I strapped the volcano cone player1 and player2 atari buttons to the front of some bottle rockets? ;)
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SONIC on April 10, 2003, 02:03:56 am
Voted "It's my cab..."!
Yes! I would might MAME a classic cab, but only if the game itself didn't mean that much to me! Cabs I would never do anything to but polish are cabs like Bubble Bobble, Outrun, R-Type, Jackal or other games that meant allot to me as a kid! But if I became a Tetris or somewhat other cab where the original game didn't mean sh*t to me, I would have no bad feelings maming the sh*t out of it :D Call me terrorist, but in the end everything the most of us seek is the original arcade feel about playing the old games, and a cab that looks seriously good in our living-room :) But if I could get hold of a Bubble Bobble... sweet jesus :) Would let it stay like it was for ever, that's for sure!!!
Btw... now I'm talking about Bubble Bobble... how comes it lags at times when playing 2 players??? I mean, it can't be THAT demanding, or???

Cheers doods!!!

Keep it real, and don't hate eachother :)



Didn't you kill the Defender?

If so, I need to find myself a nice Bubble Bobble......... and put an AXE in it! *grin*

No hard feelings.  ;D

Killed the Defender? Dunno what you're talking about, the only cab I own and have ever owned is the Killer Instinct 2 cab ;) And that's still standing intact totally... only thing I did to it was giving it new buttons, new joysticks (Happs Competitions) and added a pc inside the machine with mame on it! The original game is still inside, so that I easily can switch to it in no time!
But you got a point there... if I saw anyone chop up a Bubble Bobble I would cry very damn loud, but only because I want such machine myself, and prolly can't get it that easy!!!

No hard feelings :)

Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SirPoonga on April 10, 2003, 10:23:15 am
The question, of course, is "what is a classic"?  This answer may be different for everybody...

I bet you most people when it comes to cabinet mutilation means a rare cabinet that is in good condition, like a recent Dig Dug.

It's hard to find cabinets like that in as good of a condition.  That's what's evil about it, if it was a dig dug cabinet with a bunch of water damage that already was painted over it already has been multilated, not much you can do to help it.

Good analogy.  If you became the new owner of the original Declaration of Independence, would you tear it to use it as bookmarks or would you try to preserve it?
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Chris on April 10, 2003, 10:52:11 am
I have to admit, my heart fell when I saw the DigDug with its front lopped off.  The painful part it that it was so completely unecessary!  I have a nice 2-player setup in the same space that the original DigDug would have provided.  I have been considering a larger control panel (I want a decent trackball!), but I would never lop off the front of the cabinet to do it...
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: MameFan on April 10, 2003, 05:27:53 pm
Whats all this talk about Bubble Bobble needing to be saved?  [Don't get the wrong idea why I'm asking this..I like BB and own one myself]

As of yet, as with any ROMSTAR game, I have not seen it in the same cabinet twice.

Personally, I picked up a Defender converted to a Bubble Bobble (Defender graphics are still underneath the maroon formica and dried contact cement)

Just like Arkanoid... I don't think BubbleBobble ever was sold as a complete game, only as an "upgrade kit".
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: J_K_M_A_N on April 10, 2003, 05:45:16 pm
Good analogy.  If you became the new owner of the original Declaration of Independence, would you tear it to use it as bookmarks or would you try to preserve it?

Well, actually, that isn't a good analogy because there was only 1 original DOI.  Personally, I don't think of any cab as unmameable. If you really want a classic cab, you can build one and make the side art and most everything else look like the original. The cab itself isn't a great piece of history. Don't get me wrong, I LOVE to see classic cabs because it brings me back to a pretty good childhood. But if I saw a new clone of a classic cab, I would feel the same about it. I mean, it is possible to make a classic looking cab nowadays with the computers for the sideart and marquees and control panel graphics. To me the cab was/is just a cab that usually looked ok. Not great. It is the game that was/is great. Just my thoughts.

J_K_M_A_N
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: MilitiaMan on April 10, 2003, 06:36:32 pm
There are generic JAMMA cabinets everywhere to be MAME'ed if you look hard enough. I don't think anyone is going to gripe about my 1996 NBA Hangtime sitting out in the garage when it get's MAME'ed.

But if you MAME a Frogger, or a Defender, or ~god forbid~ a Tempest .... you are not what this hobby is all about. I would kill for a Tempest cab in even halfway decent condition ----- to restore it. NOT TO KILL IT!

Anyone need this soapbox? I'm done with it.

MM
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Brax on April 10, 2003, 10:15:37 pm
There are generic JAMMA cabinets everywhere to be MAME'ed if you look hard enough. I don't think anyone is going to gripe about my 1996 NBA Hangtime sitting out in the garage when it get's MAME'ed.

But if you MAME a Frogger, or a Defender, or ~god forbid~ a Tempest .... you are not what this hobby is all about. I would kill for a Tempest cab in even halfway decent condition ----- to restore it. NOT TO KILL IT!

Anyone need this soapbox? I'm done with it.

MM

Somebody in 10 years time will scream bloody murder you killed a Hangtime. Count on it. That was someones favortite game in 1996. Any game that was popular will become a classic in the future. That cabinet definitely classifies as a future classic. Don't be shortsighted in your butchering.

Who cared about Dig Dug cabinets in 1988?
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: paigeoliver on April 11, 2003, 08:12:08 am
Actually. Besides generic JAMMA cabinets (most of which were actually once classics themselves). the BEST cabinets to MAME are vector games. Asteroids, Star Wars, and even TEMPEST!

You know why? Because there are two of those things with dead monitors for everyone that has a working one, and they ALL seem to have problematic boardsets.

Believe me there are not nearly enough working vector monitors for all the vector cabinets out there. If you have a non-working vector game, that is probably really your best bet for MAME. And someone with a working copy of the same game will be grateful for the spare parts.

Can you still find vector monitors that work to help fix up your vector. Yes, you can. But all you are doing is keeping that monitor out of someone elses cabinet.

Another thing. The main games people seem to cry over are also the most common games on earth. People cry over converted Ms. Pac cabinets, and then go out days later and rape some working dedicated "also ran" just for the monitor.

A few years ago I was winning an auction for nonworking B&W games for $1, when the seller cancelled the auction with an hour left. I asked him what was up. He said that he was just going to burn them instead, as it wasn't going to be worth the effort to sell them.

90 percent of those Dig Dugs, Pacs and Defenders aren't going anywhere anytime soon. If you REALLY want to save something. Then save a strange game. Better yet, save several of them. I have some common games, but then I also have a few RARE games as well. My Rare ones are Jack the Giantkiller (dedicated cocktail), Time Pilot (cocktailm which is uber rare, the upright is common), and I have 3 dedicated oddballs on the way, Radar Zone, The Amazing Maze Game, and Checkmate.

Save that weird stuff, everyone of them could theoretically be "the last one". Seriously. Most of those weird games had production runs under 500. While most Atari, Williams, and Midway stuff was 4000, 8000, and even 20,000 to 100,000 and up!


Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: VMJ Team on April 11, 2003, 09:26:33 am
I saw that dig-dug cab too...also left my personal view on the subject in the Projects forum.  As an Engineer, I respect the design and creation of classic cabinets that "someone" created...but we no longer live in that time....arcade cabinets can come and go out of style...noone's trying to bring back behives or butterfly collars...If that's what you're into...great.

I grew up in the 80's and spent countless hours in arcades as many of you did.  If I had a classic, I personally would decide whether it was acceptable as is or if modifications were needed...the fact that it is a classic would not enter the decision process at all...it is simply painted particle board that some guy cut out from behind a machine and assemble with screws...then someone slapped a big ol sticker on the side and passed it down to the next guy in the assembly line...no big deal...if it was something that could never ever be duplicated again...than that is a different story entirely.
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Smittydc on April 16, 2003, 12:41:32 pm
What about a part restoration/conversion?

I took a space invaders deluxe cab that had the electronics and monitor gutted, the buttons broken, and all the art had been scraped off the glass bezel.  It was about to be broken down and tossed.

I found a replacement bezel, fixed the coin door, built a mame control panel the exact same size as the original (with more controls, of course) and gave it a lot of love and care.

I'd like to think differently, but the truth is I never would have gone through anywhere near the same amount of trouble to restore it just to space invaders.  Hats off to people who have the room and time for multiple cabinets and authentic restorations, but I'm still very proud of my "save".
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Pipercub on April 16, 2003, 04:41:09 pm
I would not consider converting anything but a classic, with two conditions. First I would not break down a working one, and second I take great care in restoring it to a very original exterior because that cabnet to me is a piece of art and was perfect the way it was. The only exception is the neccesary control panel modifications. I would also not bother with building one, I have yet to see a homebuilt that doesn't look like a homebuilt. The more modern games are OK but don't have any appeal to me, I only like the classics. Therefore, I would never go cutting up a Tempest or hot soak off the marqee paint so I could slide in some inkjeted MAME logo.




For example my two machines:

Asteroids Delux. When I bought it the side art was in good shape but everything else was in rough shape and all electronics (plus monitor) other than the main board were shot. I sold the main board to a fellow repairing his Asteroids delux. Now my Asteroids Delux looks like it rolled off the assembly line other than the addition of two joystick/button sets. So it is a classic cabnet that sports all the classics MAME has to offer.

Q*Bert. This one had been converted to a POW game when I got it. Now it looks like a factory fresh Q*Bert, new side art, new CPO, new front pannel art, everything freshly painted, new T molding, a NOS marqee, and lots of extras like locks, levelers and power switch etc. This thing looks like it was just uncrated in 82'. It also has a MAME box in it and the full compliment of games.
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: paigeoliver on April 17, 2003, 03:06:19 am
One other suggestion. If you are presented with a DEDICATED cabinet that still has a nice overlay with a fully functional control panel. Then just use that, or pull it and get one that was already converted.

There is a really good reason for that. They only have repro overlays available for about 50 games or so. But there have been 4000+ games made in the history of arcade gaming. The more oddball the game, the more likely that you would be drilling up a control panel that someone else wants (even conversion panels).

(For example), see if you can find reproduction City Connection control panel overlays? Then see if you can find an NOS one. Then see if you can find ANY City Connection control panel, in ANY condition. Don't bother looking, I looked for 2 years, and never found one. I finally sold my boardset to someone else (BTW, City Connection is one of the rarest games around, try and find one anywhere).

You don't have to have EVERY possible control on one panel. Almost any game will have a control panel that is cabably of playing a whole lot of games correctly.

Even a Space Invaders panel can play around 50-100 games.

The only real exception that I can think of is maybe a Q*Bert panel, which plays like 4 games (The 3 versions of Q*Bert, and there was something else that used that same 45 degree stick as well).

Personally I have found that I enjoy my cabinet more with less games visible on the menu anyway (80 percent of mame is crap anyway). I keep 100 games on my main menu, and from time to time I take off games that aren't getting played, and rotate in new ones.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: RayB on February 05, 2008, 04:22:15 pm
Hey looky here! From 2003!!
Title: Re:Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 05, 2008, 04:27:38 pm
Actually. Besides generic JAMMA cabinets (most of which were actually once classics themselves). the BEST cabinets to MAME are vector games. Asteroids, Star Wars, and even TEMPEST!

I'm going to print this out and send it to paige's probation officer.  This has to be a probation violation.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SithMaster on February 05, 2008, 04:35:34 pm
Im checking ebay for city connection.

edit- only found nes carts.  i guess i should gut the complete/working one in my garage and sell the parts to people who can actually use them.

Actually. Besides generic JAMMA cabinets (most of which were actually once classics themselves). the BEST cabinets to MAME are vector games. Asteroids, Star Wars, and even TEMPEST!

I'm going to print this out and send it to paige's probation officer.  This has to be a probation violation.

whats wrong with putting mame in a star wars cab?  (as long as it only plays star wars and looks as original as possible)
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Xiaou2 on February 05, 2008, 06:01:30 pm

  Most Cabs are just boxes.   They can be duplicated without much trouble.  Art is even
duplicated.   The real hard parts to duplicate are the controls and the PCBs...  and soon, 
arcade CRT monitors.


 I say, if you want to PRESERVE history,  then start to DOCUMENT the exact dimensions
of the cabs in greatest detail.   Same for the controls.   Each part dissected and measured.

 If anything, duplication will get easier and easier to accomplish..  with few exceptions.

 BUT, if there is no Knowledge,  then the is No way to duplicate anything.


 So, put up or shut up... and go thru and measure every nook and cranny of you cab...
and start a database of them.

Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Mauzy on February 05, 2008, 10:03:05 pm
What about cabs that there are literally tens of thousands of like Ms Pac? Especially if the original side art is gone (not "needs a bunch of touch up paint" gone but "sanded with three coats of primer and 4 of black paint" gone) and its got a serial of 12XXX?



No reason. Just wondering...


BTW: I didn't sand it, the guy before me did...
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: paigeoliver on February 08, 2008, 12:13:40 am
I am not really sure that it matters all that much anymore, few classic vids will be around in another 20 years, and there won't be alot of interest in actually playing the ones that are around. I imagine they will still be popular movie props though.

Ripping up classic vids is still stupid, but in the longer scheme of things there aren't going to be a whole lot of working ones around in the 2020s anyway. Most black and white games have already died in the circuitry department, and I imagine the color ones aren't far behind.

Also, in case you haven't noticed production of new arcade games has all but stopped.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SirPeale on February 08, 2008, 06:51:06 am
You're right, Paige.  We should just halt trying to preserve them altogether.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 08:54:52 am

We should focus on ancient pickup trucks instead.  Good call.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 09:51:39 am
well i will speak for both sides of the fence here:

its okay to mame a classic when you are starting out.  when i first thought about building my own arcade machine, i was just desperate to find any arcade cabinet and gut it to put my frankpanel on.  i was so excited about the possibility of playing mortal kombat, donkey kong, and street fighter all on the same cabinet with joysticks and buttons instead of a keyboard, that it didnt really matter what cab i got...it was going to be gutted.  so for beginners, i would say its just fine to mame a classic.

now, on the other hand, knowing what i know now, i would not mame a classic cab like a pacman or galaga cab.  however, the only reason i wouldnt is because if i redo it and fix it up and stuff....i can sell it and make money off of it.  i dont have the means or space to put 30 machines in my house so my thought process is "hmmm....do i preserve this pacman cab, or do i mame it so i can play pacman and 10,000 other games?".  yeah, no brainer for me.  classics are great and all, but if my objective is to play other games, then i would probably end up keeping the original art and paint, and then mameing it. 

point being, not everyone can put multiple cabs in their house, and not everyone has the skill to make one themselves, or the patience...hence the reason people mame classic cabs.  there are plans out that you can build your own pacman cab inch by inch and no one would ever know the difference (for the most part)...so its like the tree hugger hippie people say....if you kill a tree, you need to plant one.  well they dont actually say that, but hey, it meets my needs here.  if someone destroys a cab, and it pisses you off....then go build one to replace it, or shutup.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 10:04:06 am

I don't agree that a person's knowledge level dictates the morality of their actions in this case.  It may be worse if an experienced guy mames a classic but that doesn't make it right if a newbie does it.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: CheffoJeffo on February 08, 2008, 10:07:37 am
for beginners, i would say its just fine to mame a classic.

 :dizzy:
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 10:12:59 am

I don't agree that a person's knowledge level dictates the morality of their actions in this case.  It may be worse if an experienced guy mames a classic but that doesn't make it right if a newbie does it.

i agree, however mameing classics now even with what i know isnt necessarily a "moral issue" for me.  its more of a financial decision.  if i got a free pacman cab with original art, and just needed new paint.  i would preserve and sell it to make some good money.  if i could not sell and make enough money however, i would mame it, but keep the original art, cp, etc....but just take out the circuitry.  but id sell the circuitry to people like you  :angel:
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 10:14:28 am
i agree, however mameing classics now even with what i know isnt necessarily a "moral issue" for me.  its more of a financial decision.  if i got a free pacman cab with original art, and just needed new paint.  i would preserve and sell it to make some good money.  if i could not sell and make enough money however, i would mame it, but keep the original art, cp, etc....but just take out the circuitry.  but id sell the circuitry to people like you  :angel:


Then in your eyes it is actually never wrong.  It is only a question of convenience and profit.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 10:34:10 am
for beginners, i would say its just fine to mame a classic.

 :dizzy:

then what do you suggest for someone just getting into the habit? 

scenario:  free original pacman was just given to someone who is starting out with this arcade stuff.  they dont have a whole lot of room in their house, and the enjoy pacman, although they would love to have other games to play as well.  their options are:  restore the original cab and have only pacman, restore then sell even when they dont know anything about it, or mame it and play 10k games. 

morality and ethics and whatever you want to call dont really come into play here.  it really just depends on your point of view.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 10:39:00 am
i agree, however mameing classics now even with what i know isnt necessarily a "moral issue" for me.  its more of a financial decision.  if i got a free pacman cab with original art, and just needed new paint.  i would preserve and sell it to make some good money.  if i could not sell and make enough money however, i would mame it, but keep the original art, cp, etc....but just take out the circuitry.  but id sell the circuitry to people like you  :angel:


Then in your eyes it is actually never wrong.  It is only a question of convenience and profit.

pretty much yeah.  the classics can be recreated and remade...at least the cab and controls.  the circuitry and boards and all that, well i dont know if they are still being made or not, but i would at least sell those if they arent going to be used.  cabs can be recreated with a trip to home depot.  now for instance, if i came across a brand new mint condition..um....Atari console or something....and i wanted to turn it into a bookshelf or something....well then you cant really go to home depot or any local store to recreate the materials to make another atari. 

certain things cannot be easily reproduced, but cabs can.  it is just particle board like the thread says.  EVERYTHING can be easily reproduced (albeit the circuitry) by reasonable means, so i dont know everyone throws a hissy when someone tears one up.  yes its dumb to trash a mint condition DK cab.  could i make one myself now if i really wanted to?  yeah.  would be expensive?  maybe, but its feasible.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 10:43:59 am
morality and ethics and whatever you want to call dont really come into play here.  it really just depends on your point of view.


Morality and ethics are your point of view.

For your scenario:  sell it and get a more appropriate cab if they don't want Pacman.  I don't buy the "I don't understand what a classic is" argument.  If a person knows videogames they know Pacman is a classic and will know many of the other classics.  I could see someone not knowing something like Red Baron.  Battlezone?  Robotron?  Frogger?  Anyone that wants a MAME cab knows those games.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: shardian on February 08, 2008, 10:57:49 am
for beginners, i would say its just fine to mame a classic.

 :dizzy:

then what do you suggest for someone just getting into the habit? 

scenario:  free original pacman was just given to someone who is starting out with this arcade stuff.  they dont have a whole lot of room in their house, and the enjoy pacman, although they would love to have other games to play as well.  their options are:  restore the original cab and have only pacman, restore then sell even when they dont know anything about it, or mame it and play 10k games. 

morality and ethics and whatever you want to call dont really come into play here.  it really just depends on your point of view.

When I first started, I was looking for a GUTTED cab to MAME. If a real honest to goodness fully stocked and working classic fell into my lap, I would not have stripped it out to MAME it. I would have said "Sweet! A real honest to goodness working Pacman. That is awesome!" The last thing on my mind would have been to say "Sweet, a Pacman cabinet! I can't wait to play Street Fighter on this bad boy."

Coincidentally, I still have my first ever gutted cabinet. It was a Taito Alpine Ski with a Jungle king CP hacked for 2 extra buttons. I originally planned a frankenpanel modeled after Rampy's Taito cab, then I planned a switchable CP Mame cab, and finally, it is now going to be a replica Jungle king cab w/ MAME. That one cabinet best represents my evolving code of ethics in arcade gaming.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 11:00:50 am
I originally planned a frankenpanel modeled after Rampy's Taito cab, then I planned a switchable CP Mame cab, and finally, it is now going to be a replica Jungle king cab w/ MAME. That one cabinet best represents my evolving code of ethics in arcade gaming.


You're still going with 4 cupholders though, right?
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: shardian on February 08, 2008, 11:03:30 am
You're still going with 4 cupholders though, right?
6, plus matching ashtrays and a bottle opener.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 11:05:07 am

Awesome.  Replace the coinbox with a urinal drain and you're good to go.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 12:52:22 pm
You're still going with 4 cupholders though, right?
6, plus matching ashtrays and a bottle opener.

 :laugh2:

Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: CheffoJeffo on February 08, 2008, 01:20:52 pm
for beginners, i would say its just fine to mame a classic.
:dizzy:
then what do you suggest for someone just getting into the habit? 

Same thing I suggest for anybody in this hobby ... read a bit before you do something stupid.

Let's take a quote from someone you may recognize and whose opinion you hopefully respect:

Actually, it's appendix B of the current book :)

Quote
Preserving Versus MAME’ing the Past
v
The problem is that classic arcade cabinets represent a finite resource. The arcades of yesterday are just that -- a thing of the past. Barring a scattering of reproduction projects, these classic cabinets cannot be replaced. As if these problems were not bad enough for classic arcade cabinet fans and collectors, suddenly home arcade cabinets (often referred to as MAME cabinets for the emulator most often used on them) started popping up. No one begrudges someone building a personal cabinet from scratch. However, every time a classic arcade cabinet is converted to a home arcade machine, somewhere someone cringes now there’s one fewer cabinet available to collectors.

To an arcade collector, modifying a classic arcade cabinet is akin to chopping down old growth redwood forests. The person doing so may have the legal right to their actions, but they are doing a disservice to humanity. Granted, the degree of the problem is certainly different. Hacking apart an old Robotron cabinet won’t cause environmental problems or displace animals (except, perhaps, a family of mice). It will mean, however, that there’s one less Robotron cabinet in the world. That same cabinet could be some collector’s “holy grail” -- the one item they’re looking for to complete their collection. Even if the cabinet is in bad shape, someone probably has the parts and desire to rebuild it and restore it, if only they had the cabinet.
...snip...

The material in this post is copyrighted and may not be reproduced without permission

Edit - couldn't stand posting only part of it. That's the entire appendix B. It's only 1 or so pages so I don't think anyone will mind my posting it. (I wrote it but don't own the copyright, the publisher does)

I dunno if I can say it any better than that.

scenario:  free original pacman was just given to someone who is starting out with this arcade stuff.  they dont have a whole lot of room in their house, and the enjoy pacman, although they would love to have other games to play as well.  their options are:  restore the original cab and have only pacman, restore then sell even when they dont know anything about it, or mame it and play 10k games.

Read the eleventy other threads on the topic ... there is an obvious option that you missed ...

morality and ethics and whatever you want to call dont really come into play here.  it really just depends on your point of view.

You don't actually understand what morality and ethics are, do you ?

EDIT: Quoted section snipped to reasonable use length to avoid getting saint into copyright trouble
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 01:27:29 pm
meh.  i was just saying that i dont think its fair to get all up in someones face that just wants to create a mame cab.  they may just want something ghetto, and free is free, even if its worth a lot more to someone else. 

point is....if they want to play NOW, then they mame the classic cab.  play now or play later. 

bottom line though, do whatever.  i dont really care that much (other than enough to post a few times in this thread).  rest assured though if someone asks me if i want a free original pacman cab....you guys will be the first i ask for bids from  ;D
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: CheffoJeffo on February 08, 2008, 01:30:12 pm
meh.  i was just saying that i dont think its fair to get all up in someones face that just wants to create a mame cab.  they may just want something ghetto, and free is free, even if its worth a lot more to someone else. 

point is....if they want to play NOW, then they mame the classic cab.  play now or play later. 

Interesting, so it's OK to destroy a classic cabinet, but it isn't OK to complain about somebody destroying a classic cabinet ?

 :dizzy:

Again.

Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 01:44:34 pm
i dont really care that much


Cut the whole thing down to the point.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Jdurg on February 08, 2008, 01:47:17 pm
Honestly, I think the person who said that we should document the build of these classic cabs so that they can be 100% accurately built from scratch is a VERY good idea.  Over time, fire, natural disasters, etc. will destroy these cabs regardless of how carefully we preserve them.  The goal of MAME was to preserve the electronics of these cabinets by documenting how they work.  I don't understand why we can't do the same for the non-electrical part of a cabinet?  This way, if someone goes and mutilates a Frogger cab, someone who is upset by it can just go out there and re-build a cab from scratch.  Not a problem anymore since the cab that was "destroyed" is now reborn.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 01:52:01 pm
I don't understand why we can't do the same for the non-electrical part of a cabinet? 


We could.  I don't know how to properly document cabinet construction, but if I did, I would probably do it while restoring a game.  I have a Tank II taken apart right now that I could document.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: patrickl on February 08, 2008, 01:54:37 pm
I was impressed how Burt Rutan set out to design a racing plane because people were using (and destroying) loads of World War II  P-51 Mustangs for these races.

Jakobuds plans are a step in the right direction, but something like the Ms Pacman Cocktail Plans By Kyle Lindstrom (http://wiki.arcadecontrols.com/wiki/Ms_Pacman_Cocktail_Plans_By_Kyle_Lindstrom) are amazing. And again the kits you can buy from MikesArcade (http://www.mikesarcade.com/cgi-bin/store.pl?action=search&category=Cabinet+Kits) are a pretty good starting point too.

:edit: The url from the BYOAC wiki page doesn't work. It's on theBYOAC arcade plans page (http://arcadecontrols.com/arcade_cabinet_plans.shtml#Kyle_PacMan) though. Thought there was a newer PDF version of it though.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 01:56:30 pm

I went to a county fair race/demo derby once and out of the 20 or so cars at least half of them were Plymouth Reliants.  One of the guys with me used to own one and was pissed.  After 6-7 beers we almost had to restrain him from going down there.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 02:05:07 pm
Honestly, I think the person who said that we should document the build of these classic cabs so that they can be 100% accurately built from scratch is a VERY good idea.  Over time, fire, natural disasters, etc. will destroy these cabs regardless of how carefully we preserve them.  The goal of MAME was to preserve the electronics of these cabinets by documenting how they work.  I don't understand why we can't do the same for the non-electrical part of a cabinet?  This way, if someone goes and mutilates a Frogger cab, someone who is upset by it can just go out there and re-build a cab from scratch.  Not a problem anymore since the cab that was "destroyed" is now reborn.

there you go.  that would solve all problems so byoac purists or whatever wouldnt barf every time a noob shows a frogger cab frankenpanel.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 02:12:54 pm
there you go.  that would solve all problems so byoac purists or whatever wouldnt barf every time a noob shows a frogger cab frankenpanel.

They still would.  They would just tell them "here are the dimensions build your own, n00bhead".
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: hulkster on February 08, 2008, 02:18:24 pm
there you go.  that would solve all problems so byoac purists or whatever wouldnt barf every time a noob shows a frogger cab frankenpanel.

They still would.  They would just tell them "here are the dimensions build your own, n00bhead".

 :cheers:
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: shardian on February 08, 2008, 02:54:09 pm
100% detailed dimensions have been done for  a few cabinets. It is a VERY involved procedure. Spriggy has been modeling a 100% accurate T&F cocktail.
http://forum.arcadecontrols.com/index.php?topic=24005.msg195812#msg195812

It would be neat if every, or at least the top 100 or so, machines could be thoroughly documented to the point you could hand the plans to a carpenter and he could build the whole thing, including a metal CP.

I have the Mikes Arcade Midway cocktail plans and they are done in that way, including assembly instructions.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 03:06:26 pm
It would be very involved if you needed every joint and miter to be an accurate reproduction... but if you wanted it to look accurate, but the joinery and such could be different, would it really be that hard?  I guess the cabinet with curves would but but there are plenty of them that don't have curves.


EDIT:  jesus, that's what I get for posting while on the phone.  So many buts in that post.   :banghead:
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: paigeoliver on February 08, 2008, 05:17:53 pm
I wasn't suggesting earlier that you should just mame every classic cabinet in site. I was more talking about a few realities that arcade games face right now.

#1. The guys who were kids during the classic era are starting to age past being interested in this stuff. This is just now starting but will be a bigger issue in the future.

#2. All those mame cabs that we all built and the even larger number of uber-in-1 jamma boards floating around has killed most of the home market for the single dedicated machine.

#3. The electronics are now failing and the industry is nearly dead. Almost no new arcade games are made now. Dynamo wasn't even making cabinets anymore last I checked. We get a lot of our parts through the distributors that sell to commercial game operators. The death of commercial game operation will mean that eventually there aren't going to be all those easy parts flopping around for us to order.

This is the long decline. There will always be some games around, but most of them are going to die in the next 20 years, regardless of any individual efforts on our parts. Of course there is also a huge upside to this, and that is that no one is making YOU lose interest and thus you can get all the games you want, and cheap too.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: SithMaster on February 08, 2008, 05:54:25 pm
It would be very involved if you needed every joint and miter to be an accurate reproduction... but if you wanted it to look accurate, but the joinery and such could be different, would it really be that hard?  I guess the cabinet with curves would but but there are plenty of them that don't have curves.


EDIT:  jesus, that's what I get for posting while on the phone.  So many buts in that post.   :banghead:

So what if its involved.  People have been scratch building cabs for a while and they dont seem to mind.  As long as the outside is the same it shouldnt matter.  You dont see people commenting on how sweet a joint is on the inside of a cab.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: CheffoJeffo on February 08, 2008, 06:01:30 pm
So what if its involved.  People have been scratch building cabs for a while and they dont seem to mind.  As long as the outside is the same it shouldnt matter.  You dont see people commenting on how sweet a joint is on the inside of a cab.

I dunno ... Knievel has some sweet joints ...

 ;D
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: ChadTower on February 08, 2008, 10:13:00 pm
So what if its involved.  People have been scratch building cabs for a while and they dont seem to mind.  As long as the outside is the same it shouldnt matter.  You dont see people commenting on how sweet a joint is on the inside of a cab.

You're riding in the wrong cabs, bro.  I've had many a sweet joint in the back of a cab.
Title: Re: Preserve the Classics OR It's Just Particle Board
Post by: Howard_Casto on February 09, 2008, 01:36:51 am
And the award for most inappropriate flamebait post goes to SithMaster!  Way to reply to a psuedo-controversal thread that's been dead for over 5 YEARS!!!   :cheers: