Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Obama's Change

I really have nothing else to say.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Correction . . .

After looking at the photos, the shirt was made first inspiring the Lego Bat Cycle creation.

The Lego Batman Enthusiasm

My wife was doing the great Summer to Fall Clothing Swap she loves to do each year and came across a blank t-shirt for Isaac. Ding! Ding! Sharpie Shirt! And after playing with his new Batman Cycle, Isaac was very into Batman's adventures. So he decide he wanted a Lego Batman shirt. I went to the internet for inspiration and about 20 minute later, voila!

The Dark Knights Rides Again

We were at the store and Isaac saw the new Batman Lego set 7886: The Bat Cycle. He said "Daddy can we build that set?" I told him I would look at the instructions and let him know. Fortunately he already owns the Bat Boat and Bat Dragster sets so I had the right Batman pieces. Unfortunately once again I had all but two of the other pieces so I had to improvise. Here is what we came up with:

A bit bigger than the other cycle but I like how it turned out. I think he was too.

My iPod Boom Box

Here is another in the line of my Lego audio accessories. The Lego Boom Box. I built this spur of the moment after cleaning up after the mess of making the my Arcade Cabinet. I had the original speaker I was using before getting a good quality sound system from the guy I sit next to at work. So I made an iPod dock similar to an iHome.

I was surprised at the quality of the sound considering the sound was coming from the iPod and not being amplified by the speakers. This was the best part: no need to plug it in and I can take it anywhere. Also didn't have to worry about batteries for the speakers too. I also made it so it can hold my other MP3 player as well:

Lego Award Winners

My wife decided to have the kids enter there creations in the local fair this year. We looked through the fair book and found the Lego category. This excited both of them. My daughter decided to create the "Golden Castle" and proceeded to sort out all the yellow bricks she could find in our vast Lego collection. She spent at least a whole month adding and changing things until she came to this entry:

She was excited when we went to pick up the entries that she had won!

Meanwhile, my son could not decide on what he wanted to make. He put a bunch things together and would say, "I am going to enter this," and later tear it apart and create something different. So, the day we were going to take the entries to the fair he pulls this out:

And wins honorable mention as well to boot. I know probably everyone got this award that entered, but not the message I want to send to a 5 year old: throw it together at the last minute and you win. My wife agreed with me- not his best work.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

The Saga Continues . . .

Tonight I added the top marquee board, speakers, front panel,

and the cabinet door.

All done while Isaac was playing Street Fighter Alpha 2.

Right now all we have is 2 usb playstation style controllers but it works until I get arcade sticks.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

More Arcade Cabinet Construction

Well, 2 days later here is the bezel and half of the control panel. The marquee is just a print out of the actual design.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Building my Arcade Machine

It has always been a dream of mine to have an arcade machine in my house. Growing up as an arcade dweller after school at the mall and watching countless episodes of Silver Spoons, I thought it would be awesome to have an arcade game of my own. I planned for this for about three months and finally decided to move forward and build.

Originally all the wood I had was going to be used for a lego/train table in the basement but thanks to craigslist and some guy in the middle of nowhere in Elizabethtown PA, I didn't have to build one. He had built one years ago and was selling it because his kids were moving away to college amd didn't need it any more.

So, I started searching the internet for plans and came across blueprints for a Mortal Kombat II cabinet and decided that was the route I was going to take.

All the materials are leftovers from redoing the roof on our old house and dumpster diving each night in the construction site behind our house. (Side note: the builder said take anything I wanted. They were throwing it out anyway.) There was a lot of good stuff in there.

First here is the frame. My mother-in-law did all the cutting because it required the bandsaw. She has a bit more experience and my wife does not feel comfortable with me using anything other than the jig saw. A wise thought considering my past - almost severing a finger with an exacto knife. So we got it altogether and here it is.

Next, I added the sides and the board to support the monitor.
To come: the control panel, the bezel and the light up marquee.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

More downloaded instructions

Here are a few more models we built from instructions downloaded from lego.com

This is the A-Wing with a different color scheme. We made it into Boba Fett's cruiser. Also made a Boba Fett custom mini fig for it.

Next is the X-Wing fighter again with a slightly different color scheme. Don't have all the exact pieces so we improvised.

Lego iPod Dock

We got an iPod for our anniversary present for Heather to play music in the kitchen with out having all the CDs on the shelf in the dining room. We don't have a dock yet, so I built one out of Legos to keep the wires under wraps.
To my dismay, the next morning I came downstairs and found it disassembled and made into a spaceship by my son. So onto version #2 which still stands today.

Catching up on Lego

Here is set #2 Isaac got with his birthday money.

Then for his birthday from Grandpa.

Heck, i even got my wife in on the action, she will be a convert.

Lastly, set #3 Isaac bought -The Naboo fighter. His money is now gone but has plans to get Obi-Wan's Jedi Starfighter for his present from Grandma.

Saturday, May 17, 2008

New Lego Creations

Here are a few new lego creations the kids and I have been working on. I keep trying to get the concept through to them that they can make anything they want with legos. Like Isaac saw the new speed racer lego sets at Target and I said we don't need to buy it. We probably have all the pieces at home. Next they asked: well how can we build it if we don't have the instructions? All we had to do is go to lego.com and voila! Instructions in PDF form. So I built the Mach 5 (with a few modifications because I don't actually have the wheel well cover pieces or wind shield.) I also built the Racer X car with a few modifications based on the actual instructions.


Isaac was also working his X-Wing fighter. He is getting pretty good at building things.