Thought I would post the bartop I made from an iCade to offer any inspiration/ideas you might use!
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What would be the best thing to run mame on a crt with scart?
That is some amazing work! iCade is a fantastic option, I wish I could use it, since most of it's done for you, alas the monitor is at least 1cm bigger than the iCade.
Did you use acylic for the marquess around the screen?
Looks cool, but you should have gone for a tad bigger screen.
Looking slick!
Man that UI is beautiful too heh
I did. Super easy to cut and mount.
On the other hand if you build one then decide you want two players down the line, all of a sudden you have an excuse to build another one and link them up!If youre thinking "i might play 2 players" then youre better off doing a two player bartop. Might as well avoid being regretful later down the line and the difference in cost is negligible given how much youre already spending on this.
Thought I would post the bartop I made from an iCade to offer any inspiration/ideas you might use!
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What's the red button on the left? Any link to buy that kind of press button?
I know this is a very general question, but how well does a Raspberry Pi actually perform? Could it handle MAME emulation of stuff like Street Fighter 3 or Killer Instinct?
For my own picade I am looking to do a 2 player controller setup with a trackball. It seems that the trackball is a pain to add. I am looking at this one but it looks a litte pricey.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/2-Player-Ar...572?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3f4dfca104
I think I will get it so I don't have to cut wood myself, or just buy that $200 X-arcade controller.
Okay sent my drawings out to a few websites to get a quote, visited two local stores, unfortunately both did laser and not CNC so are unable to cut 12mm MDF. If the quotes are too high,I might have to rethink my design or find another way of making the parts.
They're not super-complicated shapes, so why not use a jigsaw? Will mean some hand working to get a good edge, but your time costs nothing, right?
They're not super-complicated shapes, so why not use a jigsaw? Will mean some hand working to get a good edge, but your time costs nothing, right?
Don't have the tools or space to cut it unfortunately![]()
I'm thinking about attempting this as well. However, the screens that I've seen haven't really impressed me that much. Someone suggested that it might be possible to use:
iPad 2 Screen - $46.99
LCD Screen Controller - $46.36
Not sure how much OP's monitor cost, but I assume that the option above is a little more expensive overall. However, I know the iPad 2 had a pretty nice monitor, so I wonder if maybe this would be a better quality option?
That being said, I'm not even sure that this could work with the iCade setup. Any thoughts from the more technically versed?
Don't have the tools or space to cut it unfortunately![]()
Where are you based? Might be a Make/Hackerspace you could use?
https://wiki.hackerspaces.org/List_of_Hacker_Spaces
Where are you based? Might be a Make/Hackerspace you could use?
https://wiki.hackerspaces.org/List_of_Hacker_Spaces
I'm actually not far from the London Hackspace in Hackney, hmm.,,
The iPad is semi ideal for retro stuff just cause it's a 4:3 screen if nothing else, and it's good for multi angle use if you go with a rotatable setup. There's also the retina iPad screens...I vaguely recall someone (alamone maybe?) hooking up his arcade stuff to one of those but hell if I know how, or if it was even at native resolution (2048x1536). If you could do that you could use the extra pixels to possibly get a nice screen filter going.As the iCade is designed to hold an iPad, just the screen would most definitely fit. Before ordering those parts, however, I would suggest you search to see if someone on the web has a working setup in any project so that you verify it works...
Re: jigsaw, what'd be the method to cut the inset stuff (or the U shape cutouts), just start with a small drill hole to start and thin saw bit to cut from there?
I just got my promotion and I've been trying to think of what I can do to 'treat' myself... and a PiCade is looking to be a project I'd like to do. I had an original raspberrypi and never got around to doing anything with it (and have since, sadly, lost it).
While I'd love to do a 2 person barcade using an LCD screen (lower power, lighter so it'd be easier to move) I'm thinking my best bet may be to start with something smaller.
I was thinking as a first build working from the icade like someone previously posted, how's the setup on that for this? It looks like it's got a lot of empty space and while it does have buttons already built in I'm seeing reviews that the quality of them have been pretty mixed.
Truthfully it would be easier to just make your own cabinet rather than retro fit anything.
Damn, I want to build my own at some point...but at those prices it's really tempting to just buy one of those.There are tons of kits online.
http://shop.harumancustoms.com/index.php?route=product/category&path=59
This questions is aimed at cRIPticon or anyone who owns a iCade.
Speaking with a friend today he recommend I took the LCD apart and do a measurement of the screen width without the case, it was 22.5 cm
The iCade cabinet is 24cm wide, but that's including the side panels, what's the maximum width for something to fir there?
EDIT: I think the monitor might not make it, spacing is 21cm I think according to another diy project.
On other news, the monitor is a lot smaller without the casing surrounding it.
Nice. Looks like LHS@ machine. Laser cutters are magic![]()
Did scanlines really look as they appear in emulated games? It's been far too long for me to actually remember. Emulators always seem way more pronounced with the scanlines. I can't tell if they're accurate representations or not.
Classic video game consoles work slightly differently. Generally, their graphics hardware wasn't robust enough to utilize a full 480 resolution at once, so most of them output 240p video instead of 480i (usually), like so. This only uses one field, but it's still updated at the same 60hz rate as normal SD video. The other field is left blank, creating what are often referred to as scanlines. (FYI, scanlines aren't necessarily as rigid and dark as this GIF suggests. Intensity and color bleed can vary a lot between different CRTs!)
I actually enjoy such drivel! The thought process behind whatever end decisions can be interesting and informative for others that might be going through the same thing at some point. If you have a blog or something it'd be nice to do build progress updates if you're up to it if you don't want to post about that stuff here.Sorry for not posting that much, I wanted to have something physical before posting again, otherwise it's just boring read posts about planning/concepts and such drivel.
They can vary quite a bit, and keep in mind there's some extra factors to take into account though, like what screen and connection you played on back then (not all scanlines looked alike), what screen you're playing on now (particularly resolution), and viewing distance plays a part too. I've never seen it myself, but I'm curious how various filters look on high res displays, cause that extra resolution could be used to get more detail with replicating the brightness and color bleed that can happen with CRTs.Did scanlines really look as they appear in emulated games? It's been far too long for me to actually remember. Emulators always seem way more pronounced with the scanlines. I can't tell if they're accurate representations or not.
Is that screen using an interpolating filter (along with the scanlines) or did the text originally look that bad? Interpolation is something that can make things kinda look like ass, so do anything as far as scanlines and basic scaling, just don't do the fancy interpolation stuff.Scan lines existed, but when trying to replicate them with modern hawrdware it often appears more apparent than what was the norm back then.
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This is a good thread on the matter:
I actually enjoy such drivel! The thought process behind whatever end decisions can be interesting and informative for others that might be going through the same thing at some point. If you have a blog or something it'd be nice to do build progress updates if you're up to it if you don't want to post about that stuff here.
(Course whenever I've thought about doing that type of thing myself with any project, I just end up with a bunch of pictures and get too lazy to write about it all)
Is that screen using an interpolating filter (along with the scanlines) or did the text originally look that bad? Interpolation is something that can make things kinda look like ass, so do anything as far as scanlines and basic scaling, just don't do the fancy interpolation stuff.
(That screen in general looks a bit off to me, like it looks like interpolated scale, then the scanline effect doesn't look like the proper size/resolution cause it's on the scaled size?)
Interesting, what kind of stick is that and do you know the recommended mounting depth? It looks like a Japanese stick but those are 23-24mm. Extenders would work if you want it higher, but it'll change the feel a bit cause the tilt distance will be longer and might make the tension feel weaker too.Micro update, started cutting acylic for a test, the material I used wasn't of good quality so didn't take pics. the other problem was that it was too thick, the combo of a 6mm mdf backboard and 6mm acylic left very little grip on the stick. I could proabbly get something like this:
Most likely I'll just 4mm mdf for the top plate and 2mm acrylic layer on top.
Interesting, what kind of stick is that and do you know the recommended mounting depth? It looks like a Japanese stick but those are 23-24mm. Extenders would work if you want it higher, but it'll change the feel a bit cause the tilt distance will be longer and might make the tension feel weaker too.