Arcade Machine Tip Over Concerns

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I am in the process of designing an arcade machine with the intent to manufacture and sell them. I am at the prototype stage and have a concern regarding the potential of the machine to tip over. The machine is about 160CM tall, 60CM wide and is top heavy. It would be quite easy to tip the machine over if it wasn't secured to the wall. My plan was to include two anti tip brackets and dry wall anchors with the machine and also make it clear when selling it that it is essential for the machine to be anchored to the wall and by buying it you agree to doing that.

My concern is that I will sell one to someone who doesn't secure it properly and an accident happens. Although I think I would be OK legally if this were to happen due to including the brackets and fixings and providing warnings, I am nervous that something I built and sold caused someone harm.

I am seriously considering just shelving this project which wouldn't be much of a problem for me.

What do you guys think?
 
think you already know your answer re -design it for more safety. having had a lot of experience with arcade machines and cabinets the weight is literally always in the bottom. why is yours top heavy ?
 
You could put an empty tank or something in the base that meant to be filled with sand when it arrives?

Tbh it sounds like some more work could go into the design to solve the problem more elegantly possibly
 
Would it be difficult to just move the centre of mavity so it's below half the height of the machine? I don't know what rules govern this area but I'd guess that was safe enough.

Moving heavier components down with longer cable runs, or if the screen is the heaviest part by far, just adding some ballast to the bottom (cement most likely)
 
I am seriously considering just shelving this project which wouldn't be much of a problem for me.

What do you guys think?
I've built a few arcade machines over many many years and one thing I can tell you is you can't build a decent one without a large amount of effort/expense, or to the volume you can make a profit on them. I'd be very wary of trying to make business out of it.
 
[..]
What do you guys think?

Shelve it, for two reasons:

1) Your design is unsafe. Relying on it always being correctly bolted to a solid wall is both a dubious risk and a barrier to sales.
2) Where's the profit? Games consoles and gaming PCs have replaced arcade machines in the mass market, so the niches left are nostalgia (which can be filled almost completely by consoles and PCs) and specialised cabinets offering something you can't get from a console or PC. Which yours probably isn't, given its size.
 
Absolutely tons of coin operated slot machines etc. are top heavy when empty, they usually have a big warning sticker on the back saying that they need to be secured to the wall etc.
 
Absolutely tons of coin operated slot machines etc. are top heavy when empty, they usually have a big warning sticker on the back saying that they need to be secured to the wall etc.

I've seen a couple of thousand such machines, none of which required securing to a wall. They're also only a bit top heavy when empty and sensible cabinet design makes tipping over less likely. Some are only top heavy with the doors open. Some newer ones aren't top heavy at all. The warning is more a matter of "if you do something wrong and tip it over, don't blame us because we warned you". There are some that require wall mounting for safety, but they're not normal IME. Maybe in a pub where people who are drunk and stupid might increase the risk. I know of one model of quiz machine that's wall mounted, though I don't know if that's because it's excessively top heavy or to make it harder to steal. But it takes a fair bit of force to tip almost all slot machines. I've done it deliberately to move them with a sack truck and it's not trivial. They're heavy. But they go down like a hammer if they get past their tipping point and could do serious injury or even kill someone.

The OP's statement of "It would be quite easy to tip the machine over if it wasn't secured to the wall." indicates a flawed design IMO.
 
Problem solved,put everything at the bottom. Surly we should get a cut of the profit for helping to redesign ?

If you put everything at the bottom, players would have to lie on the floor to play. Which could be a unique selling point of sorts :) Pronegaming - it's the new thing.
 
I made mine (still not finished) with and angled part that sticks out at the bottom that is used as a kick plate. Loads of genuine arcade machines used this method to provide stability and that was back when they were using big CRT monitors.
 
Why not consider shifting to table top /half hight machines then not only are you reducing your material costs, but most likely shipping costs too & won't have the worry about it toppling over.
 
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