They take off the legs, wrap the body in cardboard, fold down the backbox,
shrink wrap it, shrink wrap the legs to it, throw it on a pallet standing
up, and ship it.
On May 11, 2009 9:01 PM, "Richard" <legalize(a)xmission.com> wrote:
In article <20090512015315.GA23460(a)xmission.com>,
Pete Ashdown <pashdown(a)xmission.com> writes: > On Mon, May 11, 2009 at
03:28:13PM -0600, Richa...
So how do you ship a pinball machine? Remove the legs and pallet?
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I'm thinking about building/buying a MAME cabinet finally. One recent
innovation is to light all the buttons with LEDs, then the launching
software gives some indication as to what controls are used, along with
pinball style attract modes.
http://www.vimeo.com/852463
I'm not sure where I stand on the loss of CRT's. On one hand, they're
essential for repairing games to their original state, on the other hand I
actually prefer crisp defined pixels. I wonder if LCD's were available in
1980, would manufacturers have used them for their lo-res blocky pixel games?
In any case, a group of Georgia Tech students have come up with some of the
best CRT emulation I've seen. Can't wait to give it a try.
http://www.digitallounge.gatech.edu/gaming/index.html?id=2824