logoalt Hacker News

roskelldtoday at 4:42 AM3 repliesview on HN

I would have loved seeing this as a kid. I was obsessed with wanting to build a pinball machine when I was young. At the time my skills only stretched as far as cardboard builds with elastic band bumpers and pencils for flippers, but I got a huge kick out of making different layouts for the balls to travel around.

It would be great to see some home made efforts now with so many amazing off the shelf bits of tech and 3D printers.

The site is also a nice compliment to the Technology Connections series on old pinball machines [1].

1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue-1JoJQaEg


Replies

roskelldtoday at 4:45 AM

I should have waited till after I dove deeper into the site before replying as I see the site links to a cool looking cardboard kit you can buy[1] (or you could if it wasn't sold out).

1. https://pinbox3000.com/

bsimpsontoday at 6:12 AM

If you're reading Hacker News comments about pinball, then that series may be among the best 3 hours you'll ever spend on YouTube. I opened the comments to make sure to share it if someone hadn't already.

It's absolutely fascinating how concepts like score are implemented purely in electromechanical circuits (that is, motors not motherboards).

kruffalontoday at 6:40 AM

I came as far as implementing a very simple counting mechanism that I managed to make count up to 3 (or something like that).

Then my mother found out about me "stealing" all that cardboard and my days of pinball manufacturing where over...

Honestly one of the happiest weeks of my life!