Hi guys, well it’s been a little while since my last update, but hopefully you will agree that this has been time well spent, shall we see……
So, I left you last time, awaiting the arrival of the artwork from Olly and with the bulk of work going to be focussed around the application of this and the building of the control panel.
Well the artwork arrived and with a sharp new blade in my knife and having ‘borrowed’ Mrs M’s cutting mat, I set about trimming away the excess waste and getting each piece ready for application.
With that done, first to be fitted were the pieces that would fit behind the acrylic panels, and as you can see, another transformation takes place as soon as these are in place.
And from there it was onto the large, adhesive backed vinyl decals for the sides. After having left them taped to the side of the cab for a day to get rid of the ‘curl’, it was time to apply. Masking tape across the middle, top half applied then the bottom, using a soft squeegee thingy to smooth out any bubbles. Actually went on super easily, no bubbles, no mistakes.
So, with the artwork in place over the control panel I was able to accurately line up the exact centre holes for the buttons and stick. With these measured up, then measured again – measure twice, cut once!! I hole punched the centres and started drilling out the holes using a 28mm Forstner bit. Handheld drill only, no luxury of perfectly vertical drill stand, so had to concentrate!
Umm’d and arr’d over the best way to drill both the wood an acrylic, whether to do the wood first then use a flush cutter on my router table, or do them both together with the drill bit. I think either would produce the same result as long of the speed of the bit is controlled to not melt the acrylic. In the end I chose the latter, sandwiching the acrylic and CP between a scrap of wood. Again happy with the result.
Although the buttons would, to some extent, secure the acrylic to the wood, I also wanted to reinforce this with some fixings. I chose to use some chrome plated small headed screws, they are actually used in guitar making, and used some masking tape to accurately mark out the positions and give the drill bit some purchase.
And here’s a side profile photo which shows the screws, but also how the different thicknesses work with the Tmolding. The CP is 12mm thick, the acrylic is 3mm, the Tmolding is the same 18mm as I used on the side (no point in ordering any different size when I only need 14”). You can see that with the slot cut in the centre of the wood, the top lines up exactly and I then simply trimmed the bottom by running a sharp blade along the bottom edge of the wood.
Next up was time to add some hardware to the CP, the buttons were simple to fit, but I had decided to use the blind fixing screws for the joystick, as I didn’t want the 4 bolt heads visible on my CP. It was only when I opened them and trial fitted them on a scrap of wood that I realised they needed a minimum of 18mm thickness and not the 12mm I had fashioned my CP from.
The simplest solution seemed to be to graft a 6mm panel of wood onto the base of the CP and set the fixings through this.
Which worked out just fine – although it would throw up another problem later on…..
From there, it was easy to then fit the actual stick to the CP and then a bit of time and effort to carefully fit and sort out the wiring, as I was determined to put the tangled nest of wires into an organised (read OCD) manner.
The two metal plates at either end are there to correspond to the magnet fixings I have screwed to the side panels in order to keep the finished CP in place.
Then time to fit this last piece of the puzzle, stand back and admire the fruits of my labour so far.
Remember that problem I eluded to earlier, when I fitted the extra wood panel to the base of the CPO, well it’s clearly had the effect of shortening the shaft of the stick itself, so if you look closely you can see that it’s far too short, requiring a ‘claw’ like hand to use it. Never fear a Seimitsu Shaft Extender (OOER!) is on order and will soon sort this out.
Of course the real test was to reach behind the cab and flick the power switch fitted to the outside of the rear at the bottom of the cab and see what happened…………………..
Did it work?
Did anything happen?
Did it power up?
Did the marquee light work?
Did the game board power up?
Had I wired it all up correctly?
Well, here’s the last photo I took. Why is it the last, well I kind lost hours of my life very shortly after taking this photo. I promise I’ll take some arty shots at the weekend, but for now………
Neil.