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Page 1 of 2 Nick Vazzana, Friday, 01 December 2006 RetroBlast! contributor Nick Vazzana is back again taking his gaming to another level with a step-by-step guide on how to build your own Game Show Buzzers for interactive games such as You Don't Know Jack.
"You Don't Know Jack" Hand
Buzzers
Phase I
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By Nick Vazzana
December 2006
Phase I: Build the Controls
After more than 5 months of playing "You Don't
Know Jack" on the arcade and ignoring the little voice in the back
of my head telling me to build some hand buzzers, I finally caved. Using
the tutorial at Arcadeparadise.org
as a starting point of sorts, I decided to take the design a step further
and make some really unique and "professional" looking hand
buzzers. Since "You Don't know Jack" can only support a maximum
of 3 players at a time, I only needed to create 3 buzzers. Each one took
about 30 minutes to assemble and finish.
Material list:
- (3) Handset phone cords, or one really long one
to cut into thirds
- (3) 6" metal or plastic pipes
- (3) Mountain-bike rubber hand grips
- (6) Plastic furniture endcaps, like those found
on cheap metal tables and chairs
- (3) 8" of red and black wire, 18-22 ga
- (3) 1/2" vertical momentary pushbuttons (not
microswitches)
- (3) 1/8" 2-Channel audio jacks - Male
- (3) 1/8" 2-Channel audio jacks - Female
Tools needed:
- Soldering iron & solder
- Electrical tape
- Hot-glue gun
- Strippers (no, not that kind!)
Start by working a handgrip over a section of pipe.
Mountain Bike handgrip installed on pipe
Using the soldering gun, solder the 8" lengths
of red and black wire to the momentary pushbutton and independently wrap
the connections in electrical tape to prevent short circuits. Set that
aside.
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Momentary pushbutton soldered to wiring.
If the handset cords you're using came terminated with
RJ-11s, clip them off. Slip the plastic audio jack cover over the phone
cord and remove about 1/2" of the outer sheathing to expose the 4
telephone wires. Clip the 2 middle ones, you only need the wires on the
sides.
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Phone jack sans RJ-11 connector.
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Stripped and ready for connection.
Strip and tin the 2 remaining phone wires (they're 26ga).
Then crimp the metal 1/8" audio jack to the external insulation of
the phone cord while keeping the exposed telephone wires from wandering
in the middle. Carefully solder the wires to the outward facing sides
of the terminals and test for continuity with a multimeter.
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Terminating the phone jack wires.
Heat up a hot-glue (hotmelt) gun and inject a small
bit between the newly soldered connections to give it support and prevent
the frail wired from breaking off.
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Hot glue to stabilize the connection and strengthen
the wiring.
Thread the plastic jack cover onto the jack to close
everything up. Make a hole appx 1/4" in diameter at the end of a
plastic endcap. Thread the other end of the phone cord through the cap
as shown and tie a knot to prevent it from being pulled out by accident.
Tie a knot in the cord to keep from losing it through
the endcap.
Connect your button/wire assembly to the unfinished
end of the phone cord by stripping the wire as described before and soldering
the 2 outer wires to the un-finished ends of the red and black wires (It
doesn't matter which one goes where, just as long as they make a good
connection). Wrap the wires up independently with electrical tape to prevent
shorts in the buzzer.
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Wrap wires independently to prevent shorts.
Next, make a hole in another plastic endcap the same
diameter as the button's threaded mid-section. Work the it through the
pipe, and push it though the new endcap's hole.
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Almost done.
Once you get it through, thread the small nut onto the
button-shaft to prevent it from backing out of the cap. Roll up the ends
of the bike grips and push the endcaps over the pipe. It'll take some
elbow grease to get them on, but once they're there, you wont have to
worry about them coming off by accident any time soon. Flip the grips
back down over the cap and you're done!
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Finished Game Show Buzzer Controller.
Interfacing the handbuzzer with the cab is actually
easier than making the buzzers themselves...
Phase
II: Arcade Cabinet Integration
RetroBlast! Recommended Links
Head
Over To Nick's Site For More Pictures
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