Difference between revisions of "Mikes Mini Mame"
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Plain pine wood for the side panels, varnished with a clear wood varnish. Pine has a natural tendency to turn orange-yellow as it ages so eventually it will blend beutifully with my choise of marquee. | Plain pine wood for the side panels, varnished with a clear wood varnish. Pine has a natural tendency to turn orange-yellow as it ages so eventually it will blend beutifully with my choise of marquee. |
Revision as of 16:01, 6 December 2010
- Project Type: Bartop/Countertop Arcade Cabinet
- Construction Method: Scratchbuilt
- Monitor Type: 15" LCD TFT
- Interface Type: UltraStik 360
- Special Controls: SpinTrak, AimTrak, UltraLux & Pac-Drive
- OS: Windows XP stripped down using nLite
- Front End: MaLa
Abstract
Hello everybody,
My name is Michael, I am 34, I live in Cyprus and I am a sys-admin by profession.
This is my second build after a restoration of an old cab back in 2005.
I decided on sharing the details for this latest arcade cabinet in case others might find the read useful or entertaining.
However, the real reason is to keep a record of the build process which for me, is actually more satisfying than finally owning the finished cabinet.
Work started in Nov 2010, with most of the electronics sourced in advance from various locations.
This page will be getting updated following the actual build which in turn heavily depends on my sparce spare time. (so be patient...)
Scope
As you may have guessed from the category this is a Bartop/Countertop/Coffee-tabletop/Whichever-suits-you-besttop project.
The need for a mini, compact, carry-around cabinet rose firstly out of the obvious practical reasons from such a small size. Secondly, I found myself curious as to whether the functionality and look and feel of a full sized cab could be successfully scaled down to such a degree.
To help me better visualise my concept I have used a CAD tool which on numerous occasions proved invaluable. See design section below.
Design
Some X-ray Pics!
CAD Software
As you may have guessed, its Google Sketchup.
Functionality
Soon...
Color Scheme
Plain pine wood for the side panels, varnished with a clear wood varnish. Pine has a natural tendency to turn orange-yellow as it ages so eventually it will blend beutifully with my choise of marquee.
I chose a greyish tone pattern for my CPO. By buying extra material I can cover the rest of the panels as well.
Marquee
Hardware
Coming soon...
Computer Platform
I needed something with the following specs:
- Minimum moving parts (low maintenance, low MTBF).
- Low power consumption (less heat to dissipate).
- Small size (to fit in the cab).
- Quiet (low noise, better game sound)
- Powerful enough (to run the basic games that I enjoy most).
Motherboard
I went for the Intel D510MO mini-itx form factor (170mm x 170mm) for the following reasons:
1. Small size that would fit the cab and allow room for other components.
2. Ability for passive cooling. (no cpu fan, less noise)
3. Extremely low power consumption. (less heat in a wooden cab is a good thing)
4. Can happily run the majority of the mame games without additional hardware. (i.e. graphics cards)
Full specs here.
Monitor
Samsung TFT Panel (Syncmaster). More soon...
Power Supply
Soon...
Hard Drive
Soon...
USB Extender
Soon...
Marquee Lighting
USB light. More soon...
Power Feeds
Soon...
Power Switch
Soon...
Lock Key
Soon...
Controls
Coming soon...
Stick
Soon...
Buttons
Soon...
Rotary Dial
Soon...
Light Gun
Soon...
Software
Coming soon...
Woodworking
Let the building begin...
Side Panels
Soon...
- Templates
- Ribs
Rear Panels
Soon...
Control Panel
Soon...
Screen Bezel
Soon...
Marquee
Soon...
- Marquee Art
- Plexiglass
- Lighting
- Mounting