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Rombus pinball machine


y day, I run my own digital agency called Outfield
Digital. However, I’m also the main organiser
behind Barnsley.IO, the maker group in my home
town in South Yorkshire, as well as co-organiser of
The Things Network Barnsley, a community group
bringing free IOT connectivity to the area. Oh, and I
also like to hack retro tech for fun.
For the pinball build, I went with a LattePanda board. I would
have prefered to go with a Raspberry Pi, as it’s what I’m familiar
with, but there were a couple of reasons the LattePanda made
more sense. The first and main reason was that there just weren’t
many pinball emulators to choose from on the Linux platform. All
the main pinball emulators seemed to be Windows-based, which
the LattePanda is. Secondly, the LattePanda natively supports dual
monitors, as you can use the official 7” display that attaches via
ribbon cable to a dedicated connector, plus a regular HDMI monitor
via the HDMI port, and it just works. For both these reasons it just
made most sense to go with the LattePanda for this build.
Right now, I’ve just loaded three games onto it to test it out, but
there are whole heaps of them available online, so I’ll definitely be
filling it up when I get the chance. For now, I’m kinda digging the
Terminator 2 table I have on there, which is a pretty fun one.
The main screen uses the official 7” display for the LattePanda,
with the second ‘back glass’ display being just one of those cheap
5” HDMI displays you can find on Amazon or your friendly online
auction site. The speakers are from Pimoroni and were a lesson
in perfect timing as they just got released as I started the project,
and they were just perfect for it. In addition, I’m using an Adafruit
3.7 W stereo amp, and some arcade buttons from Arcade World. In
terms of hardware used to create it, it was all designed by hand in
Inkscape, and cut out on my laser cutter with a few small elements
created on my 3D printer (such as the little feet).
All in all, the build took a little over a month. I try to make my
builds go pretty quickly, as I like to ride the wave of motivation and I
know if I stall, I’ll end up putting it on a shelf and not finishing it.

B


By Matt Brailsford @mattbrailsford

Right
The body of this
project was all made
on a laser cutter, so
should be within the
reach of most makers
Free download pdf