This was my Christmas gift to myself this year. This Rokr Pinball Machine is possibly one of their most complex wooden puzzle kits, especially as there is a lot of pieces and electronics that goes into making one. I was also able to get this one on sale. It took me a while to work my way through all the instructions and built it methodotically. It was a lot of fun building it. More so once done as you have a working pinball machine all made of wood.
The instructions are fantastic and the pieces are easy to punch out.
20231228_121136 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here is the back piece with some lights installed.
20231229_084855 by
Chako, on Flickr
The details of this circuis themed pinball machine is something to see in person.
20231229_084919 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here you see 2 bells and 3 bumpers installed on the playing field.
20231231_081433 by
Chako, on Flickr
The trickiest part of the whole build were the ramps.
20240103_114933 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240103_114943 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240103_114958 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here I am building the front of the pinball machine. There is a metal ball storage drawer that holds a few extra balls.
20240103_115008 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here is one of the sides of the pinball machine.
20240103_115034 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here is the pinball machine mostly finished.
20240103_174527 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240103_174537 by
Chako, on Flickr
Showing the underside of the pinball machine showing the electronics. There is a switch that turns on or 0ff the music.
20240103_174605 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here are a few more photos showing the finished product.
20240104_123010 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_123020 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_123030 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here it is now plugged in. Oddly enough, there is no on or off switch. Once you supply power to the game machine, it is on. I supplied a USB wall adaptor and a switch unit to solve this problem.
20240104_171804 by
Chako, on Flickr
Here are some photos showing the pinball machine powered on.
20240104_171200 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_171215 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_171650 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_171703 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_171713 by
Chako, on Flickr
This little rotating guy does a good job of guarding one of the ramps.
20240104_171729 by
Chako, on Flickr
Powered bumpers that work nicely. The ball touches the metal floor plate, completes the circuit when it strikes the metal bumpers.
20240104_171736 by
Chako, on Flickr
20240104_171745 by
Chako, on Flickr
There are ball sensors in several strategic places that scores when the ball passes them. The ramps are challenging in not only building them, but playing them as well. The central stars that light up is how it tallies your final score. In this regard, the scoring is simple in that once you have achieved the highest score, it resets. With that said, this ROKR wood pinball machine was a lot of fun for the week it took me to build it. Playing it is equally fun. I never had to use any glue as the laser cut pieces are that precise.
I can easily recommend this for folks who like to build things and play pinball.