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Thread: Mame Cabinet #2 (Lotsa Pix)

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    Flawless Rawkality Flack's Avatar
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    Default Mame Cabinet #2 (Lotsa Pix)

    After seeing my MAME cabinet, my friend The Stranger decided he wanted one as well. Several hundred dollars and months later, here is his the story of his cabinet.



    The Stranger's MAME cabinet began life as a 1976 Atari LeMans cabinet. As far as MAME cabinets go, this is one of the worst you could choose. For starters, it has a steering wheel and gas pedal on the front. It also has a sloped control panel area, for the steering wheel. This particular cabinet had mouse crap and bird's nests all through it. It was also free.

    The first thing we did was completely gut the cabinet. This meant removing the bezel, the marquee, the speaker ... basically anything we could unscrew and remove, we did.



    Here's what we ended up with -- an empty cabinet. We peeled the artwork off of one side and eventually gave up. Since the goal of this project was to finish it in a weekend, we decided to spray paint the cabinet black. By the way, the cabinet took about three months to finish, due to my busy schedule.



    Here's me, stuck in the cabinet. Aren't I funny.



    And more of me, posing by the cabinet. You can start to see why it took three months.



    OK DEAR GOD WE GET IT. Actually, the reason I posted this picture is so you could see one of the problems we would later face. Not only is there no conventional control panel, there's really not even a good place to build one.



    The inside of the cabinet was exactly two feet wide, so starting with a 2'x1' piece of wood and a goofy grin, we started drawing. Then, we started drilling.



    If you don't already know, button holes are 1 1/8" holes. This drill bit was less than 5 bucks at Lowes, and made the entire process really easy. Basically we just pretended we were playing video games, and then kind of guessed where we wanted the buttons. A couple of pencil marks and a few measurements later, we were drilling away.



    When we got done with the control panel, we went to Wal-Mart (at around 1am) and picked up a roll of marble-print shelf paper. We wrapped the control panel in it, but it didn't stick so great, so on the underside we duct taped it into place.



    Since the original control panel was sloped, we had to make a piece of wood to cover that too. We just cut another piece of wood, also wrapped it in the same contact paper, and stuck it into place. Here I am, pointing to it. Whee!



    No cabinet would be complete without side art and a bezel. Here is the side art that the Stranger found via eBay. Expensive, but completely worth it. It immediately changed the look of the cabinet. Here's me pointing at it.



    Here's the underside of the control panel. We used an iPac to wire everything up (SO easy ... God I would not build one any other way). Every button has one wire running to the iPac, and one common ground wire. Wiring the whole thing up would have taken less than an hour but of course we learned everything the hard way on this one. I bought the wrong kind of wire, so one night we ran up to Radio Shack and got the right kind.



    Half of building a MAME cabinet is the MAME half -- that is, getting your computer configured and running just right. Trust me on this one folks, it's a HECK of a lot easier to get everything working while it still looks like a computer instead of working on it when you've got it already installed into a cabinet.



    Since we were building a cabinet mainly to play old school games, we had to run through everything and make sure MAME was rotating the games to the left. I used LemonMAME front end, which is very easy to configure for a vertical monitor as well.



    Here's another shot of the MAME guts. There's the monitor, the motherboard (which unfortunately did not have an onboard sound card), the keyboard/mouse, hard drive, CD-Rom, and power supply.



    Here's us installing the monitor. We maintained the original slope of the original monitor. We bought a few metal L brackets, and I cut some 2x4's 2' long. Then, The Stranger held the monitor in place while I frantically screwed in the 2x4's to support the weight. In the end I think we used 4 2x4's. 2 probably would have held it, but we wanted to be super sure that this thing wouldn't move.



    Not only does he drill, he looks good doing it. What can I say, folks. Once we had the monitor secured, we measured the distance from the sides of the cabinet, centered it, cut little blocks of wood to hold it in the middle and screwed those into place as well. Then we shook the cabinet violently and nothing moved. Then, we danced.



    The original marquee light was shot so we went to Wal-Mart and bought an 18" desk light. Then I cut a piece of wood to fit and we screwed it into place. Simple. To make the bezel we went to Wal-Mart (again) and bought some black poster board. We laid the original plexiglass sheet in place, and then market on the posterboard where the monitor screen would be. Then we went into the living room and cut out the square with an exacto-knife. This MAME Cabinet is has more Wal-Mart parts and duct tape than any other one on the planet.



    I always like MAME cabinets to look like real arcade cabinets on the inside, so were we are mounting the motherboard to the side of the cabinet.



    The hard drive, CD-Rom drive, and iPac board are all duct taped into place. Mu-ha-ha-ha ...



    I wasn't kidding. BTW, we cut the wires that went to the motherboard for the CPU's power button, and ran them to a spare arcade button which we hid on the top of the cabinet. Works great, and looks cool



    Final results -- here's the machine, up and running. The picture on the screen is a custom background I made out of The Stranger's favorite arcade bezels (we used the artwork from MAME). The red/blue joysticks from Happs were a nice touch. The Stranger got the marquee from the same guy he got the side art from. Lit up from the back, it looks awesome, just like the real thing!

    Here's a link to the 600x800 Background, if you want to check it out or use it: mame_background.jpg



    Here I am, covered in saw dust, playing a little Ms. Pac-Man.

    ---

    The last thing we need to do is finish up closing up the control panel, but everything works so well at the moment we hate to mess with it.

  2. #2
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    nice man .


    I f I could only find a cab or full machine around here.

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    Ladd Spencer (Level 17) Captain Wrong's Avatar
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    That is a seriously impressive piece of work. Niiiice.

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    Damn. I hate seeing people mame older cabs like that, even when they're empty. A jamma dynamo cab is so easy to get there's just no reason for this. Vendors give them away all the time.

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    Eh. Had it been a working cabinet, or had more than half its parts, or didn't have anything living in it, I would agree with you. When I got the cabinet, it had no monitor, no board set, basically nothing. The vendor kept the steering wheel to use for another game, and to be honest I can't remember if we kept the gas pedal or threw it away. I kept the marquee to hang in my arcade.

    Vendors around here do not give away cabinets. I got this one free as part of a large sale, and drove 3 hours (each way) to pick it up. If I could get free cabinets I'd be giving MAME cabs away for Christmas.

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    Now that monitor is on the side right?

    Would that cause problems for some games? Like 2D fighters and such?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Flack
    Vendors around here do not give away cabinets. I got this one free as part of a large sale, and drove 3 hours (each way) to pick it up. If I could get free cabinets I'd be giving MAME cabs away for Christmas.
    That's a shame... here in NE, once you are a known member of the arcade community, you can pretty much call around and snag an empty cab at will. Not a good one, mind you, but one stripped just like that one. I definitely would have taken that cab and put it back together, most likely MAME but running the original game and a few others that share the original controls.

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    Indeed it would. Well, they would still play, it would just look "letterboxed" with black at the top and bottom of the screen.

    Arcade games come in 2 flavors -- vertical and horizontal. GENERALLY speaking, the majority of games from 1983 and before used vertical monitors, while those from 1984 and after used horizontal ones (there are probably hundreds of exceptions, I'm speaking generally here).

    Before building a MAME Cabinet, you should sit down and give a lot of thought to what type of games you're going to be playing most. After you've decided, you have one of three choices:

    Build a cabinet with a vertical monitor.

    Build a cabinet with a horizontal monitor.

    Build a cabinet with a rotating monitor (example).

    Remember that you CAN play vertical games on a horizontal monitor and vic versa, you'll just have big black bars on the sides or the top and bottom, respectively. Just the other day I was playing NAMCO Classics on the PS2. On Pac-Man (a vertical game), they have a lot of artwork covering up the sides which would normally be black (easier than asking consumers to rotate their televisions at home).

    Great question!

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    Personally, I've never found the letterboxing to be all that big of a deal.

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    Quote Originally Posted by chadtower
    Personally, I've never found the letterboxing to be all that big of a deal.
    Some people don't, some people do. I still say it makes sense to build your cabinet for the games you plan on playing most.

    Or, build two, like I'm doing.

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    The end product there looks absolutely fantastic - awesome work. Though admittedly, I also cringed when I saw the LeMans cab was the victim shell.
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    Thank God you guys haven't seen my other MAME cabinet ...



    Again, in my defense, it had been long gutted before I came along and finished the job.

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    That one is less offensive. You didn't MAIM the thing like the LeMans cab. That one is at least salvageable if you choose to revert it. The LeMans cab is gone and plastered with 'artwork'.

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    You don't like it, I get it. Point made. Next subject.

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    i would absolutely love to build one of these, but I know I never could, I cant even make roms work on an emulator....
    I would end up getting the cabinet, making it look perfect, then never being able to install any of the computer parts or anything.
    i guess ill just buy one of the incredibly expensive premade ones some day.
    BLAST AWAY AND GO GO GO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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    Bah, it's not hard at all... a little patience, a little time, and a lot of hanging out in the right forums and anyone could build one.

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    Pear (Level 6) downfall's Avatar
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    Yeah - I'm in the process of gathering funds and parts right now for mine, and what I have in mind is quite a bit more ambitious than any of the other MAME cabs that I've seen, save for one. And, if I'm trying to tackle the project, then *anyone* can, because I have very little faith in my ability to actually put one of these things together.

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    Downfall, care to share what you have in mind? I'm hoping to build one myself in the next year or two, but time will tell if I ever actually do anything about it.

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    I suppose that since it was gutted (with no CP, that was my deciding factor) Maming it was the right thing to do. I would have kept the sideart, though (since it's cool) and not done marble contact paper.

    But that's just me.

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