Pinball Plastics Protectors make your own demonstration

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  • Опубліковано 23 сер 2024
  • Hi all.
    This is a video of how to make your own sling protectors. You can make any plastic / protector you like, in this video I also create a protector for the "boat" that always gets destroyed on Fish Tales.
    The plastic I use is Polycarbonate which is also called Lexan. It comes in sheets of various thickness, what I'm using is slightly less than 2mm (about 1/12 inch). I would recommend slightly thinner than what I have used (I guessed when I purchased my sheet).
    I make my plastics larger on the side that takes the impact (from of the slings typically, the boat base in Fish Tales). You probably don't need to add as much as I have in this video, indeed you may not even need to add any. I use the marker pen thickness as the amount that I add but my marker pen had gone fat and fuzzy with over use and created a fatter than usual outline.
    Remove the marker pen from your original plastics with Methylated spirits (denatured alcohol).
    This process is useful for also replacing clouded / cracked clear plastics as well. I replaced a couple of plastics in Apollo 13, including a huge one that's about 600mm long over the shooter lane and they came up amazingly well.
    I've even made a plastic (with graphics) for a "World Cup Soccer" using this process. The graphic I printed on high resolution paper on my inkjet and sandwiched between two clear plastics. While not identical in colour when held up beside the original plastic, you would never know that it wasn't original. Fortunately the thickness wasn't easy to see where the plastic was placed.
    For a bit of a laugh, if you look really closely at the last shot (of the boat plastic in place) you might see me in the captive ball. :)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 9

  • @HaikuAutomation
    @HaikuAutomation 13 років тому

    Just love the industrial nature of the work you do, hack and slash. The black sharpie around the original with the markings on the edge makes me smile. That is a lot of work to avoid breakage. Just put some washers on the posts that are the same radius as the plastic or a little larger and no worked needed like you have shown.

  • @hool10
    @hool10 7 років тому +1

    Back in my day we used to saw and sand our plastic protectors! None of this laser cut, fancy ass just buy and install crap! LOL

  • @HaikuAutomation
    @HaikuAutomation 13 років тому

    I agree the full plastic protection is likely worth the effort if the plastics are indeed likely to break. I just think that is a LOT of work to get them protected. I have seen most plastics break at the flipper corner and not much elsewhere. Nice work putting together the vid. Keep up the tips.

  • @ClarkMills
    @ClarkMills  13 років тому

    @HaikuAutomation
    Hi there.
    The washer trick works well but is just a little to visible for my liking. I think you can get polycarbonate (clear) washers which would alleviate that to a large degree, (which may be what you were referring to). Also a washer will only take care of a corner strike, though 99% of the time it will be for the slings.
    Kind regards... Clark

  • @ClarkMills
    @ClarkMills  12 років тому

    Hi there.
    Polycarbonate (and all plastics) is slightly opaque (cloudy) so the graphics look less punchy/crisp. The marker comes off with meths :)
    Hope that helps, kind regards... Clark

  • @ClarkMills
    @ClarkMills  12 років тому

    @bigblackhemi Excellent idea, I can see that that would work quite well! Thanks! :)

  • @davidrendon9838
    @davidrendon9838 4 роки тому

    Where and what kind, can I get the plastic?

  • @jjsrt8
    @jjsrt8 12 років тому

    @ClarkMills oh ok thanks

  • @jjsrt8
    @jjsrt8 12 років тому

    i have a question why put them underneath the piece and not on top? also umm you got alittle marker on the artwork there proably dont care much since you wont look at it closley but if it was mine omg im so ocd it would bother me ever time i walk past.