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    Homemade Star Wars Upright Cabinet

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Projects and Themes
    star warsyokevectorcabinetadvmame 3.9
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    • J
      james.milroy @dw89
      last edited by james.milroy

      @dw89 Hi there, thanks for the support. I really wanted to build a cockpit as that's what I played on back in the 80's but sadly I don't have the room for one. And I have to thank @mitu as well for his help sorting out the udev rule to keep the yoke deadzone at bay. He really knows his stuff.

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      • D
        dw89 @james.milroy
        last edited by

        @james-milroy

        Oh, sure, more than welcome. Credit where it's due and all๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿป. I remember when I was a kid dreaming if having my own arcade one day. It was always the cockpit, servo'd Afterburner unit that did it for me. Loved that. That and Phoenix in cocktail table version! Enjoy your unit, you deserve it๐Ÿ˜‰.

        Mitu's a legend. Only person who offered me any help to fix my issue's. Im sure it's obvious to those that know Retropie inside out but I've been totally lost on how to fix them. Even Pimoroni seemed to have no advice that helped....and it's their stuff. I guess it's really a software thing but I can't understand why Im the only one having the issues (esp as I can duplicate them every time). Still, Mitu to the rescue. Helps me understand doing it to help others so all's good๐Ÿคž

        Cheers, dw๐Ÿ˜

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        • L
          LandyVlad
          last edited by

          Awesome build !

          Hardware: The parts of a computer system that can be adjusted with a hammer.

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          • R
            Ryan73 @james.milroy
            last edited by

            @james-milroy Thanks, that would be awesome!! I have a CNC machine but would have to find someone for the 3d printer stuff.

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            • D
              Dissent
              last edited by

              Excellent work @james-milroy! I'm right there with you on the wiring...so clean!

              I do have a 3D Printer and just bought a GRS Flight Yoke to start putting a full control panel (and hopefully cabinet) together. Would you please share your 3D files with me and please tell me what height the yoke should be off the floor? I'm doing some prototyping now. Thank you in advance!

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              • ColstarC
                Colstar @james.milroy
                last edited by

                @james-milroy Just plain WOW!

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                • J
                  james.milroy
                  last edited by

                  For those who have asked for me to share my files, I'll endeavour to get copies put up on my Google Drive over the weekend when I'm off work.

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                  • wmarcioW
                    wmarcio
                    last edited by

                    Cool, one of the most beautiful I saw here on the forum. Professional and clean work.

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                    • J
                      james.milroy
                      last edited by james.milroy

                      Ok then, the Fusion 360 file is in the cloud but it can be accessed using this link: Fusion 360 Public Link

                      The DXF files for the metalwork and the wooden/MDF cabinet parts are in a zip archive on my google drive.

                      The STL's for the 3D printed parts (bezel details, coin door and speaker grills) are also in the same zip archive.

                      The Fusion 360 file is only intended as a visual reference to construction, it is by no means a tutorial. As I have said before, if I was to start again, there are a number of things I would have done differently. But this was only ever intended to be a one-off, and snags had to be rectified on the job or new parts made. Thankfully though, the metalwork and all the parts I had cut from MDF all fitted together beautifully from the off.

                      I can provide links to the companies I used for the sheet metal and the CNC cutting of the MDF if required, but I'm sure there are any number of similar outlets available elsewhere or you may even have access to the required tools yourself.

                      This is the link to the zip archive: On my google drive

                      All STL files now in the archive.

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                      • J
                        james.milroy @Dissent
                        last edited by

                        @dissent Hi there, just measured my cabinet and the height of the flat part of the control panel is 39 inches (99 cm) from the ground. That is the distance I measured on a real cabinet. To get my 3/4 scale cabinet up to the required height, it sits on a riser much like the arcade1up cabinets. One last thing, I've just uploaded links to my files, you'll need fusion 360 to view the main file, its free to download and use for personal use!

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                        • J
                          JohnG @james.milroy
                          last edited by

                          @james-milroy said in Homemade Star Wars Upright Cabinet:

                          This is the link to the zip archive: On my google drive

                          All STL files now in the archive.

                          This is awesome!

                          I've been hemming and hawing for the last year about how to finish up the panel for my scratch built sit down version. Last winter, I ended up building a 8'x4' CNC cutter in preparation to try to cut some of the paneling and had sort of settled on making my own greibling out of half cuts of large dowels and stuff like that. I'm going to try to blow up your 3/4's up to full size and give it a test.

                          https://photos.app.goo.gl/wDW6BAjAUiWkY7eP9

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                          • DNunoD
                            DNuno
                            last edited by

                            Wow, this is really cool, well done!
                            Can you give more details about the hardware solution used here ?
                            A Pi3B+ with a Pimoroni Picade X HAT connectd on it, but do you also use and adapter to transform the HDMI signal into VGA for your monitor ? I would be interested to see pictures of all that stuff connected together? :-)

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                            • J
                              james.milroy @DNuno
                              last edited by

                              @dnuno As you've said I'm running a Pi3B+ with a Pimoroni Picade X HAT. This gives me a power switch and LED, buttons and an audio amp with speaker connections. The Pi is connected to the monitor with an HDMI to DVI cable. I had tried HDMI to VGA using a dongle but that resulted in an inferior picture since I was effectively converting the HDMI output (digital) to VGA (analogue) for the monitor to re-convert back to digital internally to create a display. The yoke is an Alan-1 replica with an Atari plug on so you can install in a 'real' arcade machine. I connect this to the Pi with an Alan-1 USB yoke adapter. Thats really the extent of the electronics in the build. There are pictures earlier on in the thread. I can take some more if they would help. Next time I have the back off of the cabinet, I'll be replacing the Pi3 with a Pi4 to get more oomph and hopefully a better emulation using one of the newer emulators.

                              DNunoD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • DNunoD
                                DNuno @james.milroy
                                last edited by

                                @james-milroy

                                Thanks for your reply.
                                I've just finished my projet :-)
                                I'm using a real Star Wars flight yoke controller. I had a computer based system for more than 15 years! But this computer eventually broke, and I got this opportunity to replace this old PC set up with a more reliable & modern solution : a raspberry :-)
                                I was about to order the Alan1 usb controller to hook the orignal yoke, but I had the very good surprise to see my Microsoft Dual Strike USB hack (See here) I've done for PC 15 years ago .... is also recognized by the Retropie 'out of the box' :-)

                                I however still have one issue to fix... a very strange issue.
                                Sometime, at the end of the first level, I don't fly to the death star.
                                The game is not frozen, I mean I can still flight, I can shoot laser, but there's no more enemy... and I can fly endless, without entering to the death star... see ->

                                deathstar.jpg

                                This not happen to every game, but quite often. I believe it's because at this time I do not have at this time a power supply enough powerful to correctly feed the raspberry... I've just orderer it now. Or maybe the Pi3b+ is not powerful enough? A very strange issue... Did you got this too?

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                                • J
                                  james.milroy @DNuno
                                  last edited by

                                  @dnuno Hi there, well done on completing your project. I'd like to see more pictures of the finished cabinet if thats ok. As for gameplay, I think the 'not flying to the Death Star' you are experiencing is a bug if I recall correctly. It is rectified in newer versions of mame and better reads of the original roms. What emulator are you using? and which roms? I must say I've not experienced this bug myself. I'm using a combination of Advmame 3.9 and lr-mame2003 plus.

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                                  • DNunoD
                                    DNuno @james.milroy
                                    last edited by

                                    @james-milroy

                                    Here's a pic of my Star Wars cockpit :
                                    swc.jpg

                                    I've switched from lr mame version 0.78 to advance mame 0.94 and it seems that the 'not flying to the death star' bug is solved on this version :-)

                                    J ClydeC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                    • J
                                      james.milroy @DNuno
                                      last edited by

                                      @dnuno Nice, I'd have loved to have built a cockpit but sadly, I don't have the room for one, an upright had to suffice.

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                                      • ClydeC
                                        Clyde @DNuno
                                        last edited by

                                        @dnuno Great build! ๐Ÿ‘

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                                        • N
                                          Nic1169 @james.milroy
                                          last edited by

                                          @james-milroy
                                          Hi there James. Where did you get the artwork for this cabinet? Do you have any files?

                                          Nic

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                                          • N
                                            Nic1169 @james.milroy
                                            last edited by

                                            @james-milroy
                                            Do you have the artwork files you could possibly share?

                                            mituM J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote -1
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