Note that some
of the pictures (especially the Action shots) have a dark band across part of the
monitor. This is because of the lower refresh rate of the monitor and the digital
camera's capturing of one instant in time. A lower refresh rate is what real arcade
monitors have and what you want in order to display an accurate picture of an arcade
game. Playing the games, running Windows, DOS, or anything else, you see no dark
bands across the screen. Everything is perfect, perfect, perfect. |
ArcadePC Pics |
| Picture |
Close-up of ArcadePC running ArcadeOS |
| Picture |
Full size ArcadePC running ArcadeOS |
| Picture |
Another close-up of ArcadePC running
ArcadeOS |
| Picture |
Close-up of ArcadePC running DOS |
| Picture |
Full size picture of ArcadePC at home |
| Picture |
Another full size picture of ArcadePC at
home |
| Picture |
Full size picture of ArcadePC with removed
front panel and HotRod controls |
| Picture |
Close-up of ArcadePC running Windows98 |
| Picture |
Back of ArcadePC (note vent for monitor
[top] and fan at very bottom) |
| Picture |
Another picture of ArcadePC back |
| Picture |
Back of ArcadePC monitor |
| Picture |
Open back panel of Arcade PC |
| Picture |
Keyboard Pullout of ArcadePC |
| Picture |
Wiring of monitor controls to front of
ArcadePC |
| Picture |
HotRod controls removed from ArcadePC |
| Picture |
Back of HotRod controls removed from
ArcadePC |
| Picture |
Another pic of removed HotRod controller |
| Picture |
Close-up of surge protector inside ArcadePC |