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So I was sitting at work on a somewhat overcast afternoon engaging
in the strangest conversation of my career, (No sir. If you spill hot
coffee on your powerbook and then drop it into the toilet while relieving
yourself in the Men's Room at National Airport, it is not covered under
warranty.) when my good friend Cannonball pops up on my iBook screen
with news that has been deemed important. He proceeds to enlighten me
to the fact that MacMod.com is having a custom mod contest and that
there are prizes. He continues on and in due conversation, informs me
that it happens to be my moral obligation to enter the contest. At that
point, I was forced to inform my rather excited friend that computers,
unlike idiots, most assuredly do not grow on trees. He counters my wit
by offering up his desktop machine and flat panel display in the name
of art and adventure. Surprised and impressed by his determination and
faith, I inform him that if I'm doing the work, and he's doing the donating,
he gets to pick the theme, as this is going to be a mod with a theme.
My friend smiles for a moment, and then says one word. "Tiki!"
Okay, things being as strange as usual, I've just been charged with
turning a graphite G4 into the epitome of Polynesian Pop. Based on my
love of tiki bars, polynesian shwag, and the hole style in general,
this shouldn't be a problem. The world abounds with tiki, and I can
rock that party. Little did I expect that it would be a month long adventure,
and a piece that would cause me more than a little frustration. with
all that said, lets get rolling.
"Grog me Barkeep!" - Guybrush Threepwood, "The Curse
of Monkey Island"
With theme mods, your topic is usually pretty defined. You have a central
subject that you work based on, and the changes, additions, and other
such nonsense you apply to the project should all directly relate. For
this, I needed immersion into tiki. Being that I'm already a lover of
polynesian pop and the ultra-lounge stylings, I dove into tikiroom.com,
Shag's website, Bosko's
website, konakai.com,
and downloaded Kenny
Sasaki & The Tiki Boys' album "Tiki Moon" from the
ITMS. Konakai led me all over the internet finding tiki things I never
knew existed. From tiki antenna toppers, to 6 foot tall Moai statues
made of concrete, I got to see it all. This led me to inspiration for
the display.
I reasoned that I wanted to go au natural with the display and have
it look as organic as possible. Well, as organic as an LCD panel can
get. I also wanted to depart from the apple form factor as much as I
could, without destroying the display. The original bondi's are classics
after all. So, I decided to unscrew the front bezel plastics and give
them a faux stone finish. A trip to Wal-Mart yielded the faux stone
paint from Rustoleum. I sprayed several coats of this onto the front
bezel plastics will I was happy with the coating. Be aware, that stuff
thats several very long hours to touch dry, unlike the usual enamel
aerosols. Once the plastics were dry and reassembled, I cut apart a
place-matt I had purchased from the World Market, and two small votive
torches. I wrapped and hot glued to the place-matt parts to the front
and sides of the display. I then cut two equal pieces from the 6 foot
length of Bamboo that I got at Wal-Mart (I knew, shocked me too) and
drilled into them so I could seat the mini-torches. the torches were
then glued together, and then glued to the sides of the display. This
rendered our finished display. In the process or building it, I made
a mess of the kitchen, found out my glue gun leaked, all over the floor,
and had to change the filters on my respirator because that stone spray
paint clogged my filter heads all up. So, a gorgeous display, and a
lesson learned.
  
With the display complete, I had to get cracking on the computer. I
was a week behind because of the work I had to do to get the Flaming
Blue G4 finished. So, I laid out the plans for the tower. First, I needed
to strip the machine down to the chassis and parts, that was easy. Then,
the side shells needed clearing in the alcohol bath. While the shells
were clearing, I could pain the plastics, the chassis, and shop for
other stuff to complete the mod. For this one, I would need brown airbrush
paint, Bombay Mahogany wood stain, a red lava tube, 3 kinds of Rum,
balsa wood, bark textured paper, water transfer decals, and several
yards of masking film. I also enlisted the help of my partner in crime.
The Reverend is a much better sketch and draw artist, so I tasked him
with laying out the palm trees on the shells, which he did like a champ.
Once they were masked, I attacked them with Sharpie Poster Paint markers.
While he was laying out the trees however, I took the chassis outside.
In the garage, it got several layers of Auto Air white base coat sealer.
Once sealed and heat cured, It got 5 coats of the Auto Air Metallic
White (Fine) paint. with curing done, it was clear-coated with my usual
Valspar lacquer in a can.
  
Once the chassis was painted, the Rev. and I applied the wood paper
to the non-door side with 3M Super 77 spray adhesive. Once dry, the
Rev. trimmed everything to shape. All I could say was "WOW."
The paper looked awesome.
I then proceeded back upstairs in order to scrub off the gray paint
from the side shells. Luckily, Apple used a pretty cheap paint for the
shells. They figure that nobody is gonna tear their stuff apart, so
why worry. But, 15 minutes in the Rubbing Alcohol, and the stuff comes
right off. In the past, I've seen people use household sponges and toothbrushes
to remove this crud. Not me. I don't feel like wearing out my arms scrubbing.
I let the Black & Decker Scum Buster do the scrubbing. Amazingly
enough, it tears the gray paint right off, without marring the plastic.
It works like a charm every time.
With the chassis painted, the shells cleared and palm treed, the Rev.
headed home to paint the tiki faces on the apple logos. I got to work
locating a beach scene. I broke up the winner into four chunks that
were then printed onto full size sheets of water decal film. I then
took this film, soaked it, and applied it to the door side of the case.
Once it was dry and tacky, I cut it along the door, so the case would
open. the whole shebang was then clear coated to protect the image.
Once the beach was applied and the palm trees painted, I attached the
door to that side of the machine along with the front, top and back
plastics and hoops that had been painted brown. I then soaked and curved
1/32 inch balsa wood to match the curve of the front of the machine.
this was then glued in place with more Super 77. Once dry, I cut out
the optical drive slot and waited for everything to dry hard.
  
Once dry, I stained the entire fronting with the Bombay Mahogany stain.
The Rev. then returned and cut out the tiki god pieces for the front
of the machine. these were also stained. Once dry, they were hot glued
into place. this left us with only some small pieces left to finish
  
Tiki masks and such were printed onto more decal film and applied, along
with the other tiki apple logo to the non door shell, that was then
put into place. this finished the front and sides of the unit. Leis
were then glued to the bottom of the machine to trim it out. Before
attaching the top lei's, a hole was dremeled into the top plastics and
case to run the power and switch assembly for the neon tube. The tube
was installed and connected, and the power button was mounted. the top
lei was then glued into place.
  
Finally, black Sharpie marker was used to detail the tiki face on the
front of the machine.
With everything complete, it took us a little under a month. Some of
these tasks sound like they were quick and easy, but most took several
hours. I've condensed this a little so that reading it wont take several
days.
Please head to the gallery for the complete photo collection. below,
and at the end of the gallery are the photos of the finished project.vPlease
note that there are in fact real votives in the tiki torches. There
were plans for a miniature coconut fog machine, but the darned thing
spattered water everywhere, making it unusable around electricity. Please
look over this wacky mod, enjoy the fruits of our labor, and remember,
only one G4 on the planet makes the computer room feel like the islands!



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