Re: Arcade Cabinet Repair
Posted: Sun May 10, 2020 1:45 pm
How much later? It seems like programming is the one thing you are both good at and able to do without walking around.
Flack wrote: Mon Jul 13, 2020 7:33 pm It's an old Joust cabinet that someone converted to Buster Bros long before I bought it. I bought it non-working at an auction for $25. You know how they always say "it's probably just a fuse or a loose cable or something"? When I got it home, the power cord had been pulled out of the power supply. I reattached it, and it worked great!
Flack, I'm going to do something here which is unheard of and completely out of character for me. I'm going to ask relevant questions! (Audience gasps in shock.)Flack wrote: Sun May 10, 2020 4:51 pm This step (taping a paper template to the wall)? Not scary at all. THIS step (cutting a 9"x12" hole in your drywall)? Scary as fuck!
Well, yeah, you're sliding a speaker into a pre-cut hole, what could go wrong?Flack wrote: Sun May 10, 2020 4:51 pm This step (putting the speaker in the hole)? Back to not scary!
I used the "fuck it" method, which is also the dry method. I've been working on this cabinet for far too long, and I'm ready to get it done. I looked up how to paint the coin door and I watched a video where a guy spent two days disassembling everything and sandblasted it before painting it. I taped off the wood and the plastic coin slots and spray painted the thing in two minutes. Applying side art is a little scary but knowing that people will never see both sides of the cabinet at the same time puts you in a zen mode. I put the top left corner two inches in from the back and two inches down from the top, and tried to keep it straight.Ice Cream Jonsey wrote: Tue Jul 14, 2020 3:43 am Flack, that looks great. Did you try the WET METHOD or DRY METHOD for putting the side art on??