First bartop arcade project - finished
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I just finished my first arcade project. It was a bit of a struggle since every part of the proces was new to me, but with the help of youtube, guides on the internet and searching forums it all came together in the end :-)
Here is the finished bartop arcade:
The last two pictures shows a stand I made for it (when it just sits at home), which hides a lille refrigetator (for beer) and a shelf for glasses and other stuff.
EDIT: By the way, the speaker on the back is the subwoofer. It was a tight fit in such a compact cabinet like this, put I found the space :-) On one of the sides you see two buttons, which are 'normal volume' and 'bass/subwoofer' volume'. There is also a little hole for a minijack, which mostly is the sound input for the arcade system, but I made it like this so you can also hook it up to you smartphone/tablet if you want to use the system as external speakers for music (since the bartop is made to take with me).
I you want to see more pictures of the process, I have made an album with lots of pictures, which you can se here. The desciptions are in Danish, but it pretty much explains itself.
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Wow. A nice piece of art!
Cheers.
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@whsiung Thanks! :-)
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i can totally get behind a beer fridge arcade. great job! :)
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@SteffenMB Nicely done!
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Ha, ha, thanks :-)
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What a beauty. I wish that I could create something similar in the near future.
Since we're both danish I would like to know where you purchased your T-molding?
Also if you used 12mm MDF wood how did you managed to put the t-molding on the machine?
I'd also like to know where you got the Marquee from?Thanks
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@Brigane said in First bartop arcade project - finished:
What a beauty. I wish that I could create something similar in the near future.
Since we're both danish I would like to know where you purchased your T-molding?
Also if you used 12mm MDF wood how did you managed to put the t-molding on the machine?
I'd also like to know where you got the Marquee from?Thanks
Hi Brigane
The cabinet didn't have slots for T-molding, so instead I glued on some chrome strips that are normally used for cars :-) I just found a size that matched the edges of my cabinet :-)
I designed the marquee using an online design tool at arcade4you.de, where I also bought the cabinet kit. You can actually also design other parts (like the control panel and the sides) with that tool if you want to. They also have some designs to choose from, if you don't want to do that yourself. They then print the design you have made/chosen and and send it to you.
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I see that it's not a Picade. How did you manage power? Do you have an adapter lying on the floor for the large LCD screen? Because the Picade gets its power from USB for the Pi, the audio and the LCD screen. If you want a larger screen then you run into troubles: they ofte do not work w/ the hardware that comes w/ the Picade and a larger LCD screen takes more power.
I almost bought me a Picade a few weeks ago when it was in stock again. But I like to play classic Arcade games (Mame) and those are 3:4 and not 4:3 which make them not occupy the whole screen. Classic games like Pac-Man look way to small on Picade's 8 inch screen.
Your cabinet, however, looks like something from 80's Arcade heaven! Especially on the beer fridge. My circle of friends is gonna be much bigger if I were to have this thing in my house!
Are you considering selling a kit on-line? Dunno if you'll even break even on that, but you will make some 40+ men very, very happy, ha ha.
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@SteffenMB Thanks for the quick respond. This website is gold worthy, with many functions that seems quite useful. I didn't know such a useful website existed at all. Thanks a bunch!
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Looks killer! The chrome edging makes it stand out! Very nice
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@Arrakis Thanks :-)
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@Meneer-Jansen said in First bartop arcade project - finished:
I see that it's not a Picade. How did you manage power? Do you have an adapter lying on the floor for the large LCD screen? Because the Picade gets its power from USB for the Pi, the audio and the LCD screen. If you want a larger screen then you run into troubles: they ofte do not work w/ the hardware that comes w/ the Picade and a larger LCD screen takes more power.
I almost bought me a Picade a few weeks ago when it was in stock again. But I like to play classic Arcade games (Mame) and those are 3:4 and not 4:3 which make them not occupy the whole screen. Classic games like Pac-Man look way to small on Picade's 8 inch screen.
Your cabinet, however, looks like something from 80's Arcade heaven! Especially on the beer fridge. My circle of friends is gonna be much bigger if I were to have this thing in my house!
Are you considering selling a kit on-line? Dunno if you'll even break even on that, but you will make some 40+ men very, very happy, ha ha.
Hi Maneer
About the power, I have a power strip inside with 5 things plugged into it:
- Raspberry Pi 3
- the amplifier (whichs runs 2x15W speakers and a 30W subwoofer)
- the LED-buttons
- the marquee light (a LED-strip)
- and, as you guessed, an old 19" monitor.
He, he, thanks for wanting to buy a kit :-) I'm afraid I haven't got plans on doing that, because I think the thing would become too expensive to make a profit (also just the time to make instructions etc.) - and I have bought pieces and bits from a lot of places like Denmark, England, France, Germany, China and Bulgaria.
But there are places, whichs sell kits like that - or almost. I've come across places like https://gameroomsolutions.com/ in the US and https://arcade4you.de/ in Germany. But there is also great pleasure in putting it together yourself the way you want it - searching Ebay or finding cheap, second hand stuff (I found and bought the 19" monitor for only £5).
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@SteffenMB said in First bartop arcade project - finished:
Hi Maneer
About the power, I have a power strip inside with 5 things plugged into it:
- Raspberry Pi 3
- the amplifier (whichs runs 2x15W speakers and a 30W subwoofer)
- the LED-buttons
- the marquee light (a LED-strip)
- and, as you guessed, an old 19" monitor.
He, he, thanks for wanting to buy a kit :-) I'm afraid I haven't got plans on doing that, because I think the thing would become too expensive to make a profit (also just the time to make instructions etc.) - and I have bought pieces and bits from a lot of places like Denmark, England, France, Germany, China and Bulgaria.
But there are places, whichs sell kits like that - or almost. I've come across places like https://gameroomsolutions.com/ in the US and https://arcade4you.de/ in Germany. But there is also great pleasure in putting it together yourself the way you want it - searching Ebay or finding cheap, second hand stuff (I found and bought the 19" monitor for only £5).
Hello Steffen,
I see now where one can order the kit that you built. It looks great. But wasn't it difficult to get the 19" monitor in?
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@Meneer-Jansen Well, pretty much everything in this one was a tight fit, but the monitor wasn't a big problem. It could have been if it was bigger, though. 19" is maximum in this cabinet kit.
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Props for the beer fridge mate :)
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@SteffenMB Did you paint the case? It looks amazing!
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@rbaker Thanks! Yes, I gave it some layers of black spray paint (satin finish). It was originally white, which could have looked cool (and modern) too, but I wanted it to be a bit more 'retro black' :-)
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@SteffenMB Really like the Bartop on top of Beer Fridge solution.....Excellent idea!
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