Bill and Ted Phonebooth

jackdoud

Sr Member
A year ago a friend of mine asked me to make him the light up payphone from the Bill and Ted movies. That build thread is up here: http://www.therpf.com/showthread.php?t=222124

This year he decided he wanted the rest of the booth. After researching phone booth design and construction I quickly realized our best option would be to find an actual booth as building one from scratch was a bit outside of my abilities. Fortunately there happened to be one on Ebay relatively nearby for a price my friend was willing to pay. A quick 10 hour round trip to Virginia and we had a decent starting point.

20150410_181818.jpg

20150410_182658.jpg

10394524_10152956201397408_2667309869770209489_n.jpg


Step 1 was to lighten the weight of the booth by removing the glass and enameled steel panels and replacing them with acrylic and fiber reinforced plastic. We stripped out the shelf and phone mounting bracket then went to work removing the retaining brackets and rubber gaskets. All the rubber was still in good condition for the most part which was good because I'm not sure what we would have done to replace it.

IMG_0002.jpg

IMG_0003.jpg

IMG_0007.jpg


The marquees were replaced with acrylic spray painted white on the back with vinyl lettering added. We found a pretty close umbrella, sprayed it red and attached it to the roof with an electrical wire crimp fitting so it's removable.

20150628_161353.jpg


20150628_161337.jpg


Next up was to make a floor. I built a wooden platform then screwed an aluminum sheet to it before bolting it to the booth legs. I used angle stock to cover the sides for a clean look.

20150716_150809.jpg

20150719_154620.jpg


The tricky part was going to be making the door. We got lucky in that the opening is 32" wide. To make life a little easier I picked up a 30" bi-fold closet door at the hardware store, removed the slats, painted it silver and then installed acrylic.

20150628_123441.jpg

20150816_153325.jpg


Before hanging the doors I filled in the open spaces around the base of the booth with some bent aluminum panels. They're not the most sturdy option but they required the least amount of visible fasteners. I then added a spacer strip of wood to the frame of the booth and hung the doors. As a track guide I installed some U-channel over the door and an angle bracket to the door itself to hold a door guide just like they did for the smaller of the movie booths.

20150823_193225.jpg

20150823_193220.jpg


Final step was to replace the light. The existing fluorescent was burnt out but a standard electrical box was already wired into the top of the booth. All I had to do was install a plug on the wire coming out of the back of the booth and stick a couple plug in fluorescent bars and a work lamp into it.

11896253_10153259354642408_4208138098392978422_n.jpg


We do have a Circuits of Time directory to hang below the phone. Anyone in the Eastern Pennsylvania region that wants to check it out, the booth will be on display as a free attraction this coming weekend at Retro Con 2015. http://retrocons.com/

I can't guarantee that it'll get you an A on your history report though. :cool
 
Last edited:
This thread is more than 8 years old.

Your message may be considered spam for the following reasons:

  1. This thread hasn't been active in some time. A new post in this thread might not contribute constructively to this discussion after so long.
If you wish to reply despite these issues, check the box below before replying.
Be aware that malicious compliance may result in more severe penalties.
Back
Top