Bartop Arcade Machine
A more portable mini Defender-oriented arcade machine based on Raspberry Pi with separate interchangeable control panels.
Status: getting there
Intro
Defender is an arcade video game that was released in 1981 (http://www.arcade-museum.com/game_detail.php?game_id=7547). This game was truly groundbreaking and it captured the imagination of myself and many others. It was bright and colourful, loud, futuristic and exciting, but more than anything it was really hard to play with its bizarre collection of controls: an up-down joystick, a "reverse" button, and buttons for "thrust", "fire", "smart-bomb", and "hyperspace". There were 6 different types of enemies, each with different AI and an impossible goal to achieve: protect the defenceless humanoids scattered over the surface of the planet. There was a sense of purpose and real threat, and to a kid it was gobsmackingly awesome!
<TODO photo gallery>
<TODO summary and jump menu>
- Raspberry Pi
- PiPlay AdvanceMAME install - http://piplay.org/
- initially using a Raspberry Pi Model B+ I got from Phenoptix (for £26.99 using a 10% discount code for EMFCAMP 2014)
- upgraded to a Raspberry Pi 2 Model B to improve performance (£33.94 from CPC with 8Gb NOOBS SD card)
- Dell e172fpb LCD 17-in monitor with broken controls
- thanks to Rob Miles for the donation
- fault: main menu flashes up - removed panel controls for now, which solves it until I need to make adjustments
- BENQ internals
- removed plastic housing and built a thin laser-cut boxing to hold it in place
- 360 x 296 However, there are tabs and screws on the sides that stick out slightly
- had a go at fixing the panel controls - buzzed out all the connections and one of the pushbuttons is slightly dodgy but nothing major
- refitted panel buttons and they all seem to bring up a padlock icon!
- OSD locked seems to be a common issue with these monitors http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/peripherals/f/3529/t/19281532
- other crazyness! http://www.paulstravelpictures.com/Dell-LCD-Monitor-Flashing-Padlock-Icon/index.htm
- HDMI-VGA adapter & gender changer
- from DealExtreme - they have many versions at different prices
- worked fine with the Pi Model B+ but when I tried to use it on the Pi 2 B it would not work. I spent a few evenings going through many Pi config settings and eventually I came out with a magic combination that worked - I'd better write that down!
- 2x HP PC speakers from scrap - 16ohm, nice shape
- Audio TDA7053AT 2x1W Audio Power Amplifier SO16W http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/TDA7053A.pdf
- Alternate amp: PAM8403 - 99p with 50k pot
- cabinet
- 19mm plywood sides
- annoyingly the plywood is not even flat! both sides bend off square to one side!
- Chipboard base
- Knock-Down joints for assembly -- http://www.screwfix.com/p/white-kd-joints-pack-of-10/87601
- T-Molding
- slot cutter - from China for huge discount - 1/4" shaft required use of big router table which isn't flat!
- living hinge plywood bends with laser polypropylene sheet veneer surface
- adhesive to use for polypropylene to plywood?
- 3M Scotch-Weld Hi-Strength 90 Spray Adhesive - damn expensive!
- backlit marquee panel
- 19mm plywood sides
- Control panel: Defender layout
- original dimensions metricated!
- laminated laser cut ply and MDF
- gold leaf switch buttons
- Sanwa bat joystick
- with modified mounting plate: a diagonal cut-away that is essential to get the reverse button close enough to the joystick
- plate 95mm x 78mm
- square plastic housing is 65mm square. Use 66mm to be safe
Details
Balance
On a project like this there's a balance to be found (if you care about having any spare time at all!) between the work that you put in and the net result. People see my projects and say really nice things but I'm usually quick to point out all of the things that didn't work out the way I wanted - actually my usual phrasing is along the lines of "everything is wrong!". Net result here is not what I see from my project (a half-completed bunch of mistakes) but a collective average of what I see, what another fellow hacker sees, what a muggle sees, and what a little kid sees. The last one is the most important by the way!
I've learned a lot of lessons on this project but I think I have been true to the goal: an accurate reproduction of an imaginary machine!