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cribbage players

Any cribbage players on this site?  Just over a year ago I bought a CNC router mill for my upcoming retirement (to keep busy & hopefully make a little cash)

I have about 200 cribbage boards I have designed over the years and now I can make them much nicer and much more easily than hand drilling 240-480 holes

Since I have had the machine I have also designed up (and made) quite a few other things.  I really like the 3D 'carving' capabilities of this thing.

this is the machine I bought, along with a 3hp spindle, and a few of the other accessories.

nextwavecnc.com/.../

Parents
  • it is a fun game, perfect for long cold winters and nights at deer camp!

  • Thats pretty sweet, love the small-town vibes! I moved from a small down I grew up in, to a smaller town nearby when it got too big, then when that smaller town had 500 houses built down the road, we moved across the country to a town with maybe 600 people. I might have to drive an hour to work and 25 minutes to the nearest Walmart, but at least it's quiet and peaceful, and has a delightful farmers market. 

    $25 might be low, but if you can cut a few while you sleep then pretty alright. 

  • well, I figure most of my prices at $10/hr machine time plus cost of wood (rounded up, it's about $7.50/ft, I round up to $10/ft to pay for gas to the lumber yard).  Yeah, it might be a low hourly rate, but I also don't want to price myself out of the market, add in that my finishing skills are poor, so they all end up on the rougher side.  The township (no true city, just a township) has a population of around 13k, population per sq.mile is 415 (32 sq.miles).

    currently working on something that may have a market, may not.  A dungeon builder for RPG.  24"x24" board with a huge pocket for hex-shaped tiles (20x20 hexes for 400 tiles).  cut the board 0.040" deep, laser in the dividers for the tiles, then they can build the dungeon as they go, 13 different patterns for the hex tiles (rooms).  6-way, 5-way, 4-way, 3-way, 2-way, and 1-way (dead end).  The game master can build it the way he wants OR use a 6-sided dice to randomize the next room, etc.  There is a couple places in Lansing that do RPG/comics/nerds/etc. that might be an outlet for them

  • There is a market. You should think about ways to keep the item as thin as possible, and possibly include cover stone that magnets over the entire play surface to in order to retain the tiles orientation for the next play session ;) Also possibly a square version and a hexagon version to accommodate more players, no one likes to be "stuck at the corner of the map" 

    Crap, my Nerd is showing! Shhhh!

  • well, the base board would be 1/2" MDF.  Cut the pocket to 0.040".  the plywood hexagons from Amazon are 0.060" thick, 100 for $9.  They would get the paths laser burned.  Since I carry my USB with all my designs with me to show people at work if they are interested in any work, and to save the work if they want a custom change (same cad software at home that I have at work).  This is the base board design (red is the pocket outline, blue is the laser burn).  It is possible to use use 1/4" plywood for the base, but it is more $ than 1/2" MDF.  Not really designed as a 'play' area, but as a tracking/mapping area, not enough room for miniature figures.

  • Ahhhh ok. It's going to be a 1" hex pattern right? 

  • yup, just like the 'standard' RPG hex mats.

  • Many possibilities, you could offer some solid color hex blocks so it could be used as a map, or they can use the board to create smaller rooms. 

    Can you seal up the MDF to prevent it from sucking up water? Either from spilled drink or condensation rings from cold glasses. 

  • should be able to do that, a nice spray spar-varnish would seal it up tight, not sure what it would do to the size of the edges.  as for colored hexes, dip them in dye would color them nicely.  AND A POX ON ANY PLAYER WHO PUTS HIS DRINK ON THE GAME BOARD!!!!!!!  That rates right up there with touching the GM screen!

  • Not "on the game board" but next to the game board on the table will happen. We don't want the POX! 

  • back in the days when we played "Bushido Adventures in Samurai Japan" I made up a travel box (45 years ago or so).  Well, TWO travel boxes.  One for the Commodore-64 and printer, and one for my work surface.  My buddy ran the game, I wrote a BASIC program that would generate the random encounters (which ended up being called the DEATH MACHINE).  GM rolled for the random encounter, entered the numbers rolled through all the requirements, and it printed it out for him to use.  I made all the monsters (human and otherwise) a bit stronger, and number of them a bit larger, and it sped up game play enormously!  HUGE box, probably weighed 50 pounds with the PC and printer and an inch or so of the old dot-matrix paper in it.  It had removable legs and a power strip.  The other box was a table/dice storage system.  I kept my stuff on that one, so no chance of getting 'the pox'.  We used that for a number of years, then life happened, I progressed beyond the C64.  Eventually we started playing it again, but NO C64, so I made an Excel file that did the same thing.  Again, DEATH MACHINE label got applied to it!  His daughter is going to try to run the game now, she has the Excel DEATH MACHINE, and I also still have it, I even have it here at work!

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  • back in the days when we played "Bushido Adventures in Samurai Japan" I made up a travel box (45 years ago or so).  Well, TWO travel boxes.  One for the Commodore-64 and printer, and one for my work surface.  My buddy ran the game, I wrote a BASIC program that would generate the random encounters (which ended up being called the DEATH MACHINE).  GM rolled for the random encounter, entered the numbers rolled through all the requirements, and it printed it out for him to use.  I made all the monsters (human and otherwise) a bit stronger, and number of them a bit larger, and it sped up game play enormously!  HUGE box, probably weighed 50 pounds with the PC and printer and an inch or so of the old dot-matrix paper in it.  It had removable legs and a power strip.  The other box was a table/dice storage system.  I kept my stuff on that one, so no chance of getting 'the pox'.  We used that for a number of years, then life happened, I progressed beyond the C64.  Eventually we started playing it again, but NO C64, so I made an Excel file that did the same thing.  Again, DEATH MACHINE label got applied to it!  His daughter is going to try to run the game now, she has the Excel DEATH MACHINE, and I also still have it, I even have it here at work!

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