Great Work, If you want to reduce the Black Space between Backglass & Dmd, Then move the Top Monitor down "in-front" of the Dmd Monitor till where it wont cut of the DMD, Yep a rebuild of the BackBox, It would look nicer
That's a great build. Thanks for sharing. May I ask what you used for the side rails and also how you mounted the main play screen. Also what did you put between the screen and the rail used for lock bar?
Looks fantastic. I was playing many of the Mame VR tables on my old pc years ago but when upgraded didn't really carry it on and it all fell by the wayside. You have just given me a kick up the backside to revisit all of this and construct a table like I promised myself way back then. Just need to finish off the full-size Dalek I'm building first...!
what pinball software programs are you using? any early stern 70's and 80's virtual pinball games? what graphics card would you recommend to play these pinball games
The difference between playing pinball on a computer and playing in the pool hall or arcade is you had to put money into play. A big incentive to win a free game.
dude, it looks like you did something that only a few have done, dont play yourself short, im very impressed with this, i might very well come back and lood at this, ive got a big tv here thats going spare and i do like pinball ;) would love a real machine but way too big, im wondering how this would turn out under glass as a coffee table double up?
Amazing! Great work! Ok...question. Say I wanted to build something like this, without Ultra Realism like this one. could it be made where you can just port into it with cables from home computer, so you would not have the expense of the PC parts? I have a pretty good "gaming rig". Also you should check out "Timeshock Ultra, which is considered by a large majority the most realistic simulation EVER! but now remade to meet today's standards. Also with the remake they included cabinet support software!....for a whopping 15 bucks!!!!
You went to all this effort, and you totally messed it up with the top monitor. I honestly could not live with that, and would have to redo it again. It just looks odd when you compare it to other tables. Far too small.
Very cool V-Pin! I like the idea of using an actual solenoid under the table, for real tactile response! Thanks for sharing.
Ur a Cool Dad your son must love Pinball now ,he will always remember this Good Job FAM!!!
Great Work, If you want to reduce the Black Space between Backglass & Dmd, Then move the Top Monitor down "in-front" of the Dmd Monitor till where it wont cut of the DMD, Yep a rebuild of the BackBox, It would look nicer
Here is a table I recommend to you: Sterns Harley Davidson motorcycles pinball 3rd edition.
Great build!
That's a great build. Thanks for sharing. May I ask what you used for the side rails and also how you mounted the main play screen. Also what did you put between the screen and the rail used for lock bar?
Looks fantastic. I was playing many of the Mame VR tables on my old pc years ago but when upgraded didn't really carry it on and it all fell by the wayside. You have just given me a kick up the backside to revisit all of this and construct a table like I promised myself way back then. Just need to finish off the full-size Dalek I'm building first...!
At 0:19 is that an Amiga 500?
Well spotted! One of the loves of my life :)
what pinball software programs are you using? any early stern 70's and 80's virtual pinball games? what graphics card would you recommend to play these pinball games
Great job!
How do you take apart the border around the TV.
Very nice
size monitor in backbox?
what pinball software is ? the score is shown on the second (top) monitor .... ?
Hans Wurst hi, there are three monitors in total. The main play field, a score/matrix screen and the top backglass display.
Software is Visual Pinball
awesome where did u get the pinball games from? ive been meaning to make one of these but i was coding my own pinball game
The difference between playing pinball on a computer and playing in the pool hall or arcade is you had to put money into play. A big incentive to win a free game.
What an epic project, i would never have thought! Thanks for sharing!
thepoultrypeople Thanks for the comment! Yeh its a fun easy project to do for an amature DIYer like me!
dude, it looks like you did something that only a few have done, dont play yourself short, im very impressed with this, i might very well come back and lood at this, ive got a big tv here thats going spare and i do like pinball ;) would love a real machine but way too big, im wondering how this would turn out under glass as a coffee table double up?
Do you have or do you know of any tutorials we can follow?
What did you use on the corners where you rest your hands. It look like black plastic.
Amazing! Great work!
Ok...question. Say I wanted to build something like this, without Ultra Realism like this one. could it be made where you can just port into it with cables from home computer, so you would not have the expense of the PC parts?
I have a pretty good "gaming rig".
Also you should check out "Timeshock Ultra, which is considered by a large majority the most realistic simulation EVER! but now remade to meet today's standards. Also with the remake they included cabinet support software!....for a whopping 15 bucks!!!!
Thanks for the comment!
Yeah you could build a cabinet and run the cables out the back to a nearby PC. It would only need the video, USB and audio.
That is pretty cool looks like a lot of work
Great build!
You went to all this effort, and you totally messed it up with the top monitor. I honestly could not live with that, and would have to redo it again. It just looks odd when you compare it to other tables. Far too small.