Arcade Machine HOWTO
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Step 1: Find an abandoned arcade machine. I found mine walking home one morning. My sister spotted it at the Manly train station, left near the LifeLine and other clothing collection bin. She said, "hey look, an arcade machine". I said, "No, that's MY arcade machine, and promptly ran across the road, dug it out from beneath the other junk, and wheeled it home (lucky it had 2 wheels). | |
![]() I've already stripped and gutted all the insides. Took out a 12" CRT, Mainboard, speaker, some sort of CRT control board, a split +5V +12V power supply, and a 240V AC transformer. |
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![]() Well, actually the rear door operates in the on or off position, since it doesn't have a hinge. |
![]() You can also see where the control panel hinges up. |
![]() Everthing else is sitting outside in the wheely bin. |
Step 2: Strip out everything from inside. Some people claim you should use the original CRT, but I think this only applies to late 1990 arcade machines. I think most of the components inside my arcade machine would have merely posed a fire hazard if I had attemped to power them on- I chucked them all out. You might also want to clean out the cockroach eggs, and years of arcade gallery dirt and grime. :) | |
![]() G R E E N B E R E T (A really crappy sideways scrolling shooter from 1985 It's got a Z80 CPU on there, running at a whopping 3Mhz. |
![]() I think it runs a tad faster :) |
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Step 3: Get some PC hardware to run inside. Instead of putting a ROM board for a single arcade game inside, I put a computer inside which runs MAME - the Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator. I'll talk about this more later. | |
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![]() This takes up quite a proportion of space inside the arcade machine, with two tubes on top where the coins from the two coin mechanisms fell through. This made it quite difficult to fit in the computer as well as a speaker on each side. It'll have to come out |
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Step 4: Make any custom modifications. I wanted to make the sound a bit louder and nicer than the tinny little speaker that was original in the machine. I then thought........JUKEBOX!.... I could make a combination Arcade Machine / Jukebox! I had a pair of 8" woofers, tweeters and cross-overs laying about, so I cut some holes to fit those in. All I need now for a good jukebox is a nice amp. | |
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