Friday, June 5, 2020

another random thoughts

So I finally got my servos.  They showed up like a month later.  The seller ended up refunding me, and I tried to refund the refund but ebay doesn't make it easy so I gave up (it was also only a partial refund).  Anyway at some point I'd like to get those servo mechs going.

Work has kept me REALLY busy.  Been typically working 43 hours a week, and because of schedules I really can't take days off.  Its gotten to a point where I had so much sick time built up that I stopped accruing more time so I had to take a day off so I wasn't losing money.

Playfield ideas - Probably about once a week an idea pops into my head so I sketch it out to see if it's viable, then I take a photo of it and shove it in a folder.  Some ideas are so-so, some are pretty specific to my theme, others are like "Wow, if I saw a pinball with that sort of mech I would be blown away, why hasn't anyone tried that?"

Two things I really want to do on my next build:
1. Custom cabinet - I'm working on a cabinet that not only reduces weight and cost, but space (don't want to go into detail until I get something built)
2. For playfield art, I really don't want to print direct to wood.  I want to do an inside window sticker attached to a thin piece of 1/16" PETG (very similar to what outside edge sells).  So to ensure this is do-able I went ahead and ordered a 12x18 sample from bannerbuzz.com for $9 just so I can see how it ends up looking.  Most plywood you buy from a store isn't really 1/2", it's .468" (so with a 1/16" sheet of plastic I'm at .528")

Lastly, I was listening to the latest Coast2Coast pinball podcast (part 3 interview with Roger Sharpe).  The thing that stuck out the most was the 2 biggest things preventing more people from buying a pinball machine for home is cost and space.  He obviously talked about zizzle (cheap and small). How Williams experimented with safe cracker being a 4/5th size pinball while still feeling professional and not a toy.  How Stern is trying to reduce cost for their home model (but it doesn't tackle the space issue).  He also talks about how pool tables can be incredibly cheap (and still feel professional) for between $400-$800, so that's the price-point you're competing with.

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