
Hipster Ben is ready for Maker Faire!
Thanks to my sponsor Element14.com, I will be attending Maker Faire 2012 and doing a few panels and presentations. More information to come, check show schedules.
See you all then! Makerbots!

Hipster Ben is ready for Maker Faire!
Thanks to my sponsor Element14.com, I will be attending Maker Faire 2012 and doing a few panels and presentations. More information to come, check show schedules.
See you all then! Makerbots!

Ghost Squad whitewood
So the big news is we scrapped “Lost” pinball. This was for a variety of reasons, the main being we spent so much time trying to cram things into it that we didn’t spend enough time making it play well. So it’s a beautiful game with boring loops and bad ball returns.
But, much like our independent film projects of the past, we took this as a learning experience of how NOT to build a pinball machine. Since then we’ve been working with John Popaduik who’s taught us a lot, and is even putting me in his Zombie game!
Our next pinball project is a custom game inspired by the 2011 Halloween episode of The Ben Heck Show… Ghost Squad! It started as a way to test our new system, but is developing into a game as well. Here’s why we picked this theme:
We’re also trying to have more ball interaction toys than our previous efforts. Special features include:
So keep on eye on this site, my YouTube page and of course the Ben Heck Show!
If you’re anywhere near the Milwaukee, WI area and any bit interested in gaming then you owe it to yourself and family to attend the 2012 Midwest Gaming Classic!
We’ll be doing 2 panels – Ben Heck Zombie Advenure on Saturday at noon, and Spooky Pinball Homebrew discussion Sunday at noon.
See you all then!
We still have some episodes openings in Season 2 for viewer suggested builds. If you have an idea you’d like to see us build – especially if it’s weird, unusual and useful – why not email us and let us know?
You could see your ideas come to life!
In our latest episode we build a Solder Reflow Oven for use with surface-mount PCB’s.
We based it off the Arduino shield from Rocket Scream. For more information, and plenty of detail to build one yourself, check out their site!
It’s almost that time of year again – time for the Midwest Gaming Classic!
Aside from classic gaming they also have lots and lots of Pinball! Enjoy homebrew games from Team Heck and Spooky Pinball such as:
1) Lost – hopefully with the final playfield installed!
2) Godzilla – now with sound!
3) Bill Paxton Pinball – with an improved shooter lane and a Start button that actually adds players the right way.
Hope to see you there!

No better way to spend a Sunday afternoon! John Popaduik gave me one of his spare LED Vishay displays so I thought it would be fun to hook it up to a microcontroller (MCU)
Because it has 8 simultaneous cores and does not require interrupts, the Parallax Propeller seemed like a good bet. The code still had to be written in machine language to be fast enough.
You can download the resulting code here. Wire your DMD to your MCU by cross-referencing your machine’s pinout to the commented code (you need 6 signal wires + ground) or by looking at the Vishay docs.
A single COG is launched in SPIN and will continuously spit out data to your display. The variable array “displayX” holds your screen memory and requires 2 bits per pixel.
This gives you 4 shades of color: 0ff (00), dim (01), medium (10) and bright (11). Check the code comments for more information.
Hopefully this may be of use to anyone modding or doing homebrew pinball – have fun!