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Richard A. Faust November 21st 08 03:25 PM

Bowling Alley
 
2 Attachment(s)
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.

Rick


Lee Michaels November 21st 08 03:31 PM

Bowling Alley
 

"Richard A. Faust" wrote in message
...
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.

Looks cute. What are the dimensions?




Richard A. Faust November 21st 08 04:12 PM

Bowling Alley
 
Lee Michaels wrote:
"Richard A. Faust" wrote in message
...
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.

Looks cute. What are the dimensions?





Thanks. The total length is 48". The alley length is 44 1/2". The alley
width is 4 1/4". The total width is 8". You can buy the pins and ball as
a set at the dollar store.

Rick


willshak November 22nd 08 02:06 PM

Bowling Alley
 
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.


I'd hate to be the pin setter!


--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

Richard Faust November 23rd 08 01:02 AM

Bowling Alley
 
1 Attachment(s)
willshak wrote:
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.


I'd hate to be the pin setter!



I should have included a picture of the rack with the original post. It
only takes about 15 seconds to load and set the pins. Pretty nifty eh?

Rick


mac davis[_5_] November 23rd 08 05:10 PM

Bowling Alley
 
On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 20:02:49 -0500, Richard Faust wrote:

willshak wrote:
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.


I'd hate to be the pin setter!



I should have included a picture of the rack with the original post. It
only takes about 15 seconds to load and set the pins. Pretty nifty eh?

Rick


Pretty clever, Rick..
How long did it take ya to layout the holes, and was the first rack the keeper?

I'm thinking of making a few for friends, but being lazy, I'm thinking of just
using flat stock and routing the gutters...
You see any problems I'm going to hit that way, such as amount of slope or
anything?



mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

Richard Faust November 23rd 08 11:35 PM

Bowling Alley
 
4 Attachment(s)
mac davis wrote:
On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 20:02:49 -0500, Richard Faust wrote:

willshak wrote:
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.
I'd hate to be the pin setter!


I should have included a picture of the rack with the original post. It
only takes about 15 seconds to load and set the pins. Pretty nifty eh?

Rick


Pretty clever, Rick..
How long did it take ya to layout the holes, and was the first rack the keeper?

I'm thinking of making a few for friends, but being lazy, I'm thinking of just
using flat stock and routing the gutters...
You see any problems I'm going to hit that way, such as amount of slope or
anything?



mac

Please remove splinters before emailing


Hi Mac,

I laid out the holes on the computer and printed the pattern. I would
say the layout took about 1/2 hour. I spray glued the pattern to the
wooden rack blank and drilled ten pilot holes. I then used the scroll
saw to cut the holes. Had the pins been smaller than .500 then I could
have drilled the holes with a forstner bit. Unfortunately, the pins ran
about .525, thus causing me to scroll saw the holes. The scroll work
took about a hour, sanding included. If you decide to build an alley, I
would be happy to provide the dimensions and a layout for the pins.

Using flat stock and routing the gutters would work fine. I dadoed the
side boards to insure that the alley remained flat. I also made a couple
of wedges to slide under the alley in case the game was played on an
unlevel surface. If you like, you could make a chute/ramp to roll the
ball to the pins. I tried using a ramp, but found that it took some of
the skill away from the game. A chute/ramp might be perfect for a
younger bowler.

I already fabricated a ball return system, which works pretty well, for
my next alley. I have included a few pictures of the business end of the
prototype. The ball rolls down a chute (not pictured) and into the
business end of my prototype. The ball travels over the flipper and
remains in the space between the flipper and the dowel pin. I got my
idea from one of those old fashioned bowling alleys, sometimes found if
a firehouse.

Rick


Richard Faust November 23rd 08 11:56 PM

Bowling Alley
 
1 Attachment(s)
Richard Faust wrote:
mac davis wrote:
On Sat, 22 Nov 2008 20:02:49 -0500, Richard Faust
wrote:

willshak wrote:
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes."
The kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am
thinking about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It
might make difficult shots a little easier.
I'd hate to be the pin setter!


I should have included a picture of the rack with the original post.
It only takes about 15 seconds to load and set the pins. Pretty nifty
eh?

Rick


Pretty clever, Rick..
How long did it take ya to layout the holes, and was the first rack
the keeper?

I'm thinking of making a few for friends, but being lazy, I'm thinking
of just
using flat stock and routing the gutters... You see any problems I'm
going to hit that way, such as amount of slope or
anything?



mac

Please remove splinters before emailing


Hi Mac,

I laid out the holes on the computer and printed the pattern. I would
say the layout took about 1/2 hour. I spray glued the pattern to the
wooden rack blank and drilled ten pilot holes. I then used the scroll
saw to cut the holes. Had the pins been smaller than .500 then I could
have drilled the holes with a forstner bit. Unfortunately, the pins ran
about .525, thus causing me to scroll saw the holes. The scroll work
took about a hour, sanding included. If you decide to build an alley, I
would be happy to provide the dimensions and a layout for the pins.

Using flat stock and routing the gutters would work fine. I dadoed the
side boards to insure that the alley remained flat. I also made a couple
of wedges to slide under the alley in case the game was played on an
unlevel surface. If you like, you could make a chute/ramp to roll the
ball to the pins. I tried using a ramp, but found that it took some of
the skill away from the game. A chute/ramp might be perfect for a
younger bowler.

I already fabricated a ball return system, which works pretty well, for
my next alley. I have included a few pictures of the business end of the
prototype. The ball rolls down a chute (not pictured) and into the
business end of my prototype. The ball travels over the flipper and
remains in the space between the flipper and the dowel pin. I got my
idea from one of those old fashioned bowling alleys, sometimes found if
a firehouse.

Rick


Here is a picture with the proper progression.

Rick


willshak November 28th 08 08:55 PM

Bowling Alley
 
on 11/22/2008 8:02 PM Richard Faust said the following:
willshak wrote:
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.


I'd hate to be the pin setter!



I should have included a picture of the rack with the original post.
It only takes about 15 seconds to load and set the pins. Pretty nifty eh?

Rick

------------------------------------------------------------------------



That beats the stepping on the lever to raise the centering pins and
then placing the bowling pins on the centering pins 4 at a time (2 in
each hand), which I did for a while back in the early 50's. Nice job.

--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

Richard Faust November 29th 08 12:17 PM

Bowling Alley
 
willshak wrote:
on 11/22/2008 8:02 PM Richard Faust said the following:
willshak wrote:
on 11/21/2008 10:25 AM Richard A. Faust said the following:
Hi! This was a summer project I created called "Strawbox Lanes." The
kids, as well as the adults love to bowl on my lanes. I am thinking
about making a chute/ramp to launch the bowling ball. It might make
difficult shots a little easier.

I'd hate to be the pin setter!



I should have included a picture of the rack with the original post.
It only takes about 15 seconds to load and set the pins. Pretty nifty eh?

Rick

------------------------------------------------------------------------



That beats the stepping on the lever to raise the centering pins and
then placing the bowling pins on the centering pins 4 at a time (2 in
each hand), which I did for a while back in the early 50's. Nice job.


I always wondered what the hole on the bottom of the pin was for. Now it
all makes sense. Thanks Bill!

Rick


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