[quote name=\'dazztardly\' post=\'196109\' date=\'Sep 5 2008, 03:44 AM\']
[quote name=\'StevenRosenow\' post=\'196023\' date=\'Sep 4 2008, 04:52 AM\']
Hey Dan (or anyone else familiar with the mechanics)...
Does anyone know, how large (approximately) the circular projector windows were, in diameter?
From the Wikipedia entry, it gives a rough dimension of Bonus Island (referred to as Bullseye Island by Jim Lange on occasion - but fails to mention its platform height), but no mention is made to the dimensions of the windows or set itself.
Judging by some of the clips I've seen, it looks like the set itself stood at least either ten or eleven feet in height. Everything else is kinda iffy. If anyone knows some rough dimensions, that'd help.
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I have to no clue what the dimensions were.
Depending on how big the place is that's hosting the replica of the gameboard...don't go too nuts with it.
What's the purpose of building this?
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I guess I could (and likely should) have been more clear. I'm not building that big a replica. It'll likely be maybe 1/10th the size of the original, maybe 1/25th.
As for the purpose? Just a hobby of mine(outside of restoring old school buses) that I haven't done in a long time...
Years ago (before I had the internet, and a camera) I built fully functional 1/25th scale replicas of each Jeopardy! set up to the Sushi Bar set. For the original neon set (and the 2nd and third season iterations) I used mechanical homemade relays to control the flash rate of the neon bands and the JEOPARDY! logo (which were lit by a series of Mini-Maglite flashlight bulbs wired together in sequence). Same for the electronic "metal wicker frame" set from 1991.
The podiums were controlled by a concealed pushbutton switch on the backside of the podium and were wired with three Mini-Maglite bulbs plus a strand of clear fiber optic wire that I sanded down to simulate the neon light around the monitor (also did this for the gameboard "signaling-in light").
Each set took six months of work, and they were lost in the Nisqually quake we had in 2001. They were about 12 inches high, and the platforms were 22 inches long, and eighteen inches wide. As an extra measure, I built replica studios for them, with the studio lighting being a mix of assorted types of Christmas lights.