I've added some more detail, it's finally starting to look like a real pin. I'm starting to feel sort of like an archeologist piecing together bones to recreate what a dinosaur might have looked like.
So I've split the cabinet into 3 pieces (not worried about the middle piece just yet). I decided to make the cabinet continue at an angle all the way back instead of flaring back to a square angle (There will be angled rails on the back to mount the legs to). The backbox ends up being really big, like 35" wide. Keeping the dimensions of the backglass at the same aspect ratio, it leaves about 4" of gap underneath, which should be enough space for speakers. I know it looks really narrow, but it's because the backbox is so wide. You may notice there are some square channels inside between the cabinets. There needs to be something to tie the cabinets together, and by bolting them together along the seams is the way to go.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Total Recall thoughts
I should have never blogged about it last night because I couldn't get it off my mind and I had a hard time falling asleep (also couldn't keep my mind focused at work today). I find this interesting because I'm sure the guys at Data East at the time had the same thoughts. So here's what I went into deep thought about:
Cabinet design: Looks straight forward right? Build an odd shaped cabinet, done.. Nope, there's no way an operator would be happy trying to lift such an awkward cabinet as one piece, and the home market would hate it even more as it would make lifting into a basement nearly impossible. I'm thinking it really needs to be 3 pieces, one pentagon shaped piece in the back where the top playfield would reside, and then the 2 cabinets. As for the glass it would also need to be 3 pieces with a plastic trim to join the 2 lower panes with the upper.
Gameplay: One obvious thought is how to deal with balls from each cabinet being shared between sides. As far as the live playing, it could simply autofire a new ball in the opposite playfield after one drains in yours (very much like the 2-player joust). I don't remember what happens on joust when the game ends, does it fire any extra balls into the opposite side to make them even? Makes it a little harder when the playfields are side by side but it's certainly feasible.
I think I'm going to go ahead and model up the cabinet the way I think it SHOULD be feasibly built, who knows how far I'll take this. I do think it would be a neat project to make for real. I doubt I would ever go so deep as to create an entire ruleset and custom alphanumeric displays, but I could see buying a generic CPU like an alltek, wire up some targets to existing score points. I think just having built the cabinet and a semi-playable game would blow people's minds at a pinball show. They wouldn't care if it's not as Data East intended, they would just love playing what could have been.
Only thing is I would effectively have to run two separate pinballs (so you could start a parallel 2 player game), and because most likely you wouldn't want to try running 6 flippers off an old power supply (but 3 flippers would do just fine).
Also came up with this parody logo
Cabinet design: Looks straight forward right? Build an odd shaped cabinet, done.. Nope, there's no way an operator would be happy trying to lift such an awkward cabinet as one piece, and the home market would hate it even more as it would make lifting into a basement nearly impossible. I'm thinking it really needs to be 3 pieces, one pentagon shaped piece in the back where the top playfield would reside, and then the 2 cabinets. As for the glass it would also need to be 3 pieces with a plastic trim to join the 2 lower panes with the upper.
Gameplay: One obvious thought is how to deal with balls from each cabinet being shared between sides. As far as the live playing, it could simply autofire a new ball in the opposite playfield after one drains in yours (very much like the 2-player joust). I don't remember what happens on joust when the game ends, does it fire any extra balls into the opposite side to make them even? Makes it a little harder when the playfields are side by side but it's certainly feasible.
I think I'm going to go ahead and model up the cabinet the way I think it SHOULD be feasibly built, who knows how far I'll take this. I do think it would be a neat project to make for real. I doubt I would ever go so deep as to create an entire ruleset and custom alphanumeric displays, but I could see buying a generic CPU like an alltek, wire up some targets to existing score points. I think just having built the cabinet and a semi-playable game would blow people's minds at a pinball show. They wouldn't care if it's not as Data East intended, they would just love playing what could have been.
Only thing is I would effectively have to run two separate pinballs (so you could start a parallel 2 player game), and because most likely you wouldn't want to try running 6 flippers off an old power supply (but 3 flippers would do just fine).
Also came up with this parody logo
Monday, December 2, 2013
Total Recall pinball
This subject comes up over and over. Someone isn't aware that Data East had a concept to do a dual side by side playfield, and about every year someone discovers this and goes "Hey! anyone see this?" You know what sucks (besides the fact it never got past a whitewood stage)? There really isn't any good info on it (or renderings of what it could have been). So what I'm going to do (since I have no skill in messing around with virtual pinball but have great solidworks skills) is attempt to recreate it in solidworks. Yes, I'm going to take the crappy photo from IPDB:
http://www.ipdb.org/machine.cgi?id=4335
And attempt to recreate it in 3d, plop the backglass in, and make up my own artwork of what I think a data east total recall would look like. It might not be accurate, but it would be something to look at. Here's a very early rough layout:
http://www.ipdb.org/machine.cgi?id=4335
And attempt to recreate it in 3d, plop the backglass in, and make up my own artwork of what I think a data east total recall would look like. It might not be accurate, but it would be something to look at. Here's a very early rough layout:
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