Saturday, September 9, 2017

Pinball Hall of Fame - Las Vegas

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I was at a conference in Las Vegas a few weeks ago.  I've been to Vegas a few times and never made it to the pinball hall of fame.  Well I wasn't going to let that streak continue.

After this little ad, I'll talk about my visit...

Did you know you can purchase full-sized pinball machines from Amazon.  They will deliver them to you.

Check out these links:

Stern Pinball Ghostbusters Pro Edition Arcade Pinball Machine

Stern Pinball Spider-Man Vault Edition Arcade Pinball Machine

Stern Pinball WWE WrestleMania Arcade Pro Edition Pinball Machine

Stern Pinball Aerosmith Premium Arcade Pinball Machine

Stern Pinball The Walking Dead Arcade Pinball Machine - Pro Model

Stern Pinball Game of Thrones Pro Edition Arcade Pinball Machine

So I was staying at Mandalay Bay.  I looked on Google, it said I could walk to the Pinball Hall of Fame in around an hour.  I walk a lot in Texas, so I took off.  Well turns out, it was 112' that day.  So I only made it about half way.  Then I flagged down a taxi for the rest of the trip.

The Hall of Fame was an amazing experience.  I loved pinball machines.  I've owned about 20 of them in my life.  Always bought in pretty sad shape and fixed them up.  Moving forward, I think I'll buy one of the ones listed above...

Here's some pictures from my visit:

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The pictures don't really do justice to the number of pinball games at this place.  My favorite part was getting to play Haunted House again.   I loved that game as a kid, but haven't seen it lately.











Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Chair Back Offering / Visitor Card Pen Holder

The chairs our church purchased didn't have offering / visitor card holders built in.   We were using these horrible paper holders with a sticky back.  The sticky was gone.  Someone had added Velcro to try to make it stick better.  But it looked just horrible.  There was no place to put pens.  They got put in the man area, but would fall down and made it hard to retrieve them from without tearing the compartment.

I found a few plastic versions on the internet.  Although they looked like they would work fine, they are from $4 to $8 each.  We needed a hundred or so (putting a few per row).  As normal, we had no budget for this.  So I decided to try to build some.  Sorry I don't have exact specifications any more, but maybe this blog will give you some ideas:

I got some red-oak from Home Depot.  Any wood would be fine, but I would suggest a hard-wood.

Here's a sample of the wood cut:

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Here's how I cut the area for the cards in each holder.  I just clamped borders on 3 sides, of my tablesaw.  I installed my dado blade.  The goal is to quickly rip out the un-needed wood.  This could have also been done with a router.

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This shows the process of cleaning out the wood.  Looking back, this makes me nervous.  At the time, I didn't have a Saw Stop.  I currently have a Saw Stop JobSite saw.  At least if I screwed up, hopefully the Saw Stop would catch it...   Here's a link to the Saw Stop:  SawStop JSS-MCA Jobsite Saw

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Here's a pic of the holder flipped around after the wood was cut away.  As you can see, the bottom is super clean, but it doesn't matter and that part doesn't show.

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Here's my jig I made for drilling the holes for the pens.  I put one on each side.  NOTE:  After drilling with the drill-press, I had to drill deeper with a handheld drill.  There wasn't enough travel in the drill-press to go deep enough.

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Here's the holder after both sides were drilled for pens.  NOTE:  I have actually cleaned up my benchtop since this pic a few years ago.  I'm embarrassed to see how messy it was...

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OK, so a few sections were skipped (no pictures).  I routed the sides, to add some decoration.  I also setup a jig to drill the screw holders with the drill press.  I used a countersink bit make sure the screw heads kinda disappeared.

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Here's a look at a few of them.  I was testing the size with a standard offering envelope.

 

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Here's my test-fit I did.  I hadn't painted/stained the holder yet.  Just wanted to get approval from senior staff/board before moving forward.   Offering Envelope Matthew 10:8 (Package of 100)

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Once I was to the point of installing them on the chairs (after they were painted), I built a jig to make sure they were installed at exactly the same spot on each chair.  Also, please NOTE:  make sure the screws don't go far enough into the chair to stick the person sitting in the chair.  Especially someone fairly large.  They may compress the pad quite a bit...   But at the same time, make sure the screws are long enough to keep the holder in place.  Since I was normally sitting at the sound booth, I could see when these were in use.  Smaller kids would use the holders to pull up.  So they have to be fairly well secure.  But as far as I know, none have came off.  They are also thin enough not to interfere with stacking the chairs...

Here's a stack of ones I built.  Seeing this picture remember how much work this was.  But it turned out very very good.

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I built a sanding jig: Basic Sanding Jig  I used it to smooth all of the holders.

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unfortunately, I can't find a final picture of the product once installed.    I painted them a very very dark brown.  It actually looks black once installed, but a tiny bit of wood grain comes through.  The cost of this only came out to be the cost of wood.  I think it was less than $40...

If you have built some, I would love to see them.

 

 

 

 

 

Fear Factor - Random Item Box

We were doing the Fear Factor series a while back.   During part of it, we built a box which had the following design:

The back and sides were blacked out.  The top was blacked out, with a single hole for the kids hand.  There was even cloth in the hand hole, so they couldn't see into the box.   The front of the box was just plexi-glass.   So the kids in the audience could see what was in the box (random toys.  Just about anything with a texture).  But the kids sticking their hand in the box couldn't see anything.  It was just their touch (and fear) they were dealing with.  Of course, we had a few worms, crickets, and maybe some night-crawlers.  Had a Saturday night run to the local bait shop.  It was great watching the older boys freak out when they had to put their hand in the box.

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We didn't have an aquarium, but this would have been a great starting place to build this project.  Marina LED Aquarium Kit, 10 gallon

I made a basic box.  Put wood on all sides (except the front).  Cut a hold in the top.  Added the cloth around the inside of the hole.  Then I cut an old piece of plexi (from an old-drum cage).  I had a ton of problems getting the plexi to screw into the wood.  I pre-drilled the holes, and even countersinked them.  But the plexi still split and cracked.  Very frustrating.

You can order plexi here:

Online Plastic Supply Acrylic Plexiglass Sheet 1/4" x 24" x 36" - Clear

You can also order counter-sink bits here:

IRWIN Metal Countersink Drill Bit Set, 5 Piece

If you build (or have built) a similar game, I would love to see it...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Plinko - Pinball Plinko?

I was at VMworld 2017.  Walking through the Vendor area, I saw a lot of familiar games.  Plinko and game wheels were everywhere...

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These are easy to buy from Amazon:

WinSpin 24" Tabletop Spinning Prize Wheel 14 Slots with Color Dry Erase Trade Show Fortune Spin Game

Prize Drop

Here's some links to my other posts where I showed how I built my own game wheels and Plinko games:

Bigger Game Wheel

Wheel of WOW

Plinko Game Construction

 

So the Plinko games have been around forever.  But one I saw at VMworld had added something different.  Instead of just dropping the puck at the top, you shot it into the playfield like a pinball game...

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There are 7 prize options at the bottom.  But there was one up top (has the PD by it).  If you could land a puck in there, you won one of every prize.   I really love the idea of making it like a pinball game.  When I get back home, I'm going to work on building one like this....

 

 

 

Monday, August 28, 2017

Dance Boxes - Praise VBS

A few years ago we were doing the Praise VBS. We had just been to Dry Gulch for Kid’s Summer Camp. On their stage they had boxes that were clear (frosted) and were lit from within with colored lights. We loved how these looked and decided to do the same thing.

I ended up making boxes (the ones with the green Lights in them).   I started by building the frame out of 2X4 lumber. I made sure the boxes were strong enough to handle my weight since kids would be jumping up and down and dancing on them. You may have read in previous posts that I had an old drum shield that I had used for multiple plexi-glass pieces from. This was no exception.

I cut the pieces of plexiglass with my table saw. I needed pieces for the front/back/sides/top. I was also fairly nervous about the plexi not being strong enough for the top. I wanted the boxes to be plexi on top so the light would shine up on the kid on the box. But I didn’t want the Plexiglass to be clear (as it was). So I bought a can of frosting spray from a local crafts store. I used this to add a frosting layer to the inside of the boxes.

This turned out to be a pain in the rear. If I had it to do over, I would probably buy the frosted plexiglass from the start.

24" x 36" - 1/8" ( 0.118" ) DP9 - Two-Sided Frosted Finish- Clear SatinMatte Finish Acrylic Sheet

Once the boxes were constructed, I put 1 LED light in each one. The lights were connected to our DMX controller. We could control the lights in the boxes as well as the lights shining on the wall. We were able to get any variety of color and have rapidly changing colors…

You can see the boxes in action in a zoomed in photo:

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Then here’s the overall photo that shows the entire stage. We had the two dance boxes, a DJ booth in the middle with two turntables (DJ Hero game turntables) which weren’t functions, just for looks. We ran 3 projectors. The 2 on the sides were connected to our ProPresenter system. The middle projector had a media device (old Microsoft Zune) connected to it and would only display the single logo image…

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The funniest thing that happened during this entire process:   We put everything together Saturday night. We just worked around it for Sunday morning. Then after church on Sunday, one of the older people from church came up to me and said “That’s awesome, you made gogo boxes for the kids to dance on”. Didn’t really realize his sarcasm until he had already walked off…

 

 

Large Jenga

A few years ago, my wife had me make a Jenga game for VBS. It was super simple. I just bought 2X4’s from the local hardware store, cut them to length (using my miter saw), and sanded the edges smooth (using my sanding jig)..

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Here's a pic of when I was making it...

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We had used it a couple of times and it worked well…   But for this VBS, we wanted something a little different. The idea was to divide the blocks into sets of 4. Paint each block a different color. When a kid was playing the game, they had to spin the wheel (see instructions here),. Whatever color the wheel landed on, that’s the color of the block the had to remove from the Jenga. This just gave it an extra challenge.

Here's a couple of pics after I had painted the Jenga pieces.  I only have pics of the first two colors.

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Let me know what you think.

 

 

Friday, August 25, 2017

If at first you don't succeed, well that's normal.

So I love to how the games and stuff I build.

But quite a few times, things don't work out as planned or as idea-ed.

I typically don't even take pics of those things.  Well because nobody likes to admit they screwed something up.  But it happens to all of us.

While looking through some old pictures, I found this:

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This was my goal post for use in our sports themed VBS.  This was phase 1.  I ended up cutting the horizontal pieces quite a bit shorter.  I think I ended up having to glue the PVC together to make it stay and not droop down.  I had initially wanted to not glue it to make it easy to store.

Here's after I painted the posts yellow to make them look more like a goal post and to cover up the text:

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So even when you fail, learn from it and move on.  Don't give up.

Also, I can't believe how messy my garage was.  Man what a mess.  It is actually pretty organized now.  Maybe I'll do a post on how I work out of my garage.  Back in the past, I had to work in the driveway because of the mess in the garage.

Of course, you could always just buy a goal post set.

Franklin Sports Youth Football 2 Goal Post Set

US Toy Blow Up Inflatable Football Goal with Blow Up Football Game, 46 x 39"