Well, I posted twice re my project of creating a new gaming set up. Last time was back in February, but I didn't have any pics because I was still building my new table. I now have some pics to put up. It took so long time for a couple of reasons. One, I decided to re-finish the pine floor in my living room where the new set up was going first. That floor re-finishing was a BIG job--sanding off multiple coats of old urethane to bare wood with a belt sander, and then re-finishing of a 280 square foot area. I got that completed in March, and it turned out great. The other delay was that most of the tools I needed to build my gaming table were at a friends' cottage on the far side of a then frozen lake with no road access. I ended up transporting my oak lumber across that lake several times with a sled initially, and by canoe for the last trip in April. Also, building this table was just a lot of hours of work.
The table is now built, but still has a few construction details to be completed, as well as some filling, sanding, and lastly the finish applied. I picked up shellac for that yesterday, which will be applied first, then stain, and finally urethane for a protective coat. As pictured, the table is still just bare wood. My cheapie digital camera is broken, but I had a friend finally get a few pics for me yesterday.
The table is 40"x78' made of solid red oak planks, except for the top which is red oak veneer plywood. It was built such that it can be taken completely apart in a matter of minutes, so I may at some point replace the top with solid oak boards. The style is a centuries old design known as a 'trestle' table. I wanted to keep everything traditional, and so used mortise and tenon joinery, and it is as solid as a rock. I have very little experience in wood working and so did all my research on the web re design, and how to build it. I really love the set up--gives me lots of space for everything, and it looks really cool to IMO.The first pic is of my last trip across the aforementioned lake to do the last cutting on some of the table components. The next pic is a detail shot of the construction method using wooden pegs to tie everything together which is the traditional trestle table design. Finally, a few shots of the nearly finished setup.
The display on the wall is a 50" Panasonic plsama T.V.--I am very near sighted, so if that seems kinda big, well it suits my needs nicely. Gaming on that large screen with the adjacent floor standing speakers cranked up is really a blast.
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eVGA E770 Classified 3 - Intel i7950 - Corsair Dominator 6 Gb 1600 Mhz - eVGA GTX 580 1.5 GB X 2 SLI - WD HLHX 3000 Velociraptor 10,000 rpm HDD x 2 Raid 0 + 1 WD HLHX 3000 (storage) - Corsair AX 1200 PSU - Coolermaster Haf-X case - Prolimatech Super Mega CPU cooler with San Ace 9G1212H1011 fan x 2 - LG Lightscribe external USB DVD drive - Lamptron FC5 V2 Fan Controller - Logitech G700 wireless gaming mouse - TG3 Electronics BL82 red backlit compact 82 key keyboard - Hotas Cougar flight stick and throttle - Track IR Pro4 head tracking device - Yamaha AX-900U integrated Amp - Cerwin Vega RE30 floor speakers - Panasonic TC-P50ST30 50" 1080P 3D Plasma TV