Atari Coin Connection

Issue: Vol 6 Num 07 - 1982 September

OPERATOR OF THE '80s
E. Randall Reed of Austin, Texas
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What do video games, cattle breeding
and flying have in common? E. Randall
Reed of Le Fun in Texas has combined
these three diverse activities in his
unique lifestyle.
Not a typical amusement center
owner, Reed commutes by plane once a
week to his other source of income-his
cattle ranch which is 35 miles east of
Laredo. It's a two hundred and fifty mile
stretch between his arcade in Austin and
the ranch in Laredo, and too far to drive,
so he uses his single-engine Cessna.
Reed was in charge of an aviation bat-
talion in 1964 during the Vietnam War
and before that he was in Korea, so fly-
ing between Laredo and Austin is all in a
week's work.
On his 800-acre ranch, he has sixty
registered Beefmaster cattle-a new
breed of cattle and the second fastest
growing, according to Reed. They are a
unique breed because of their ability to
thrive on the semi-desert land of south-
ern Texas.
Reed, besides having sixty cattle, has
about sixty video games in his other
place of business-Le Fun, in Austin.
Reed got started in the amusement in-
dustry about ten years ago. His wife's
uncle, an amusement park operator in
another Texas city, encouraged Reed to
try his hand in the amusement world.
Reed's center, Le Fun, is located right at
the entrance to the University of Texas at
Austin which has an enrollment of about
42,000 students. Le Fun's clientele is
mostly students because of its close
proximity to the campus. It is open be-
tween the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 1 :00
a.m., and on Friday and Saturday it is
open until 3:00 a.m.
"Le Fun is a clean, straightforward,
good game room," says Reed. "We're
not unusually different from any other ar-
cade." One of Reed's six twenty-hour-a-
week employees has a little more to say
(about the arcade) than his modest em-
ployer. Richard Malley, a manager at the
amusement center writes .... "Hello
from one of the strongest bastions of vid-
eo games in the country. Austin, with its
large student population, is brimming
with family amusement centers and I am
proud to be an attendant at the finest
one, Le Fun. My employer, Randall Reed,
has for years believed that the best way
to run an arcade is to emphasize the
games as the best drawing card and it is
because of this that he is a loyal Atari
customer. Atari's excellent maintenance
record fits in very well with Mr. Reed's
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commitment to provide the best and
most playable games to his customers.''
Reed's straightforward personality is
reflected in his arcade. No smoking is al-
lowed; neither is drinking or eating. He
adds approximately four or five games a
month and tries to keep up with the lat-
est machines. The arcade is set back
about ten feet from the street with a
porch at the entrance. Le Fun is about
twenty five feet by seventy feet on the in-
side. The floor carpet is deep red and
video games skirt the walls. There are
also some islands of cocktail style
games in the center. Two feet from the
ceiling, a mirror encircles the room. The
southern wall has a strip of stained glass
and it is reflected off of the mirrored
walls. The illumination of the stained
glass gives color and movement to the
arcade.
A tribute to the Texan rancher, Le Fun
is a popular straightforward amusement
center to which students flock.
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Trade Show Calendar
Atari will be presenting their latest coin-operated games at several trade shows this fall.
Mark your calendar now with the following trade show dates. We hope to see you there !
Show
Dates
Location
Contact
Congress of
Recreation
and Parks
Oct. 24-27
Commonwealth
Convention Center
Louisville, KY
Nat'I Recreation
and Park Association
P.O. Box 17413
Dulles International Airport
Washington, D.C. 20041
(703) 471-5761
A.M.O.A.
Nov. 18-20
Hyatt Regency
Chicago, IL
Amusement and Music
Operators Association
2000 Spring Road
Suite 220
Oak Brook, IL 60521
(312) 654-2662
I.A.A.P.A.
Nov. 18-20
Bartle Hall
Kansas City, MO
lnt'I Association of Amuse-
ment Parks and Attractions
7222 West Cermak Road
Suite 303
North Riverside, IL 60546
(312) 442-5866
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ : : : , ; . : _ u ~ ~ w r ~ ~
'------------------
TECHNICAL TIP
3
4
Figure B
2
ADD JUMPER
1
0
3A
Dig t;)ug™
c:::::3 o "
A
Problem: Four credits for one coin .
Solution: Do the following PCB
8
modification.
Note: There are two different PCBs for
Dig Dug. The early PCBs are marked as
part number A038156, and have large,
40-pin chips located near their centers.
The newer PCBs are marked as part
number A038575 and have the large
40-pin chips along one edge, away fr om
the edge connector.
C
74504
c:::::3 o ~ c:::::3
:3
-<=>-
0
0
1,'>-00-C:: :UJ.Wl,:
CUSTOM53
~
ADD JUMPER
0
Modification for A038156 (early PCBs):
1. Cut trace between pins 18 and 19 of
LS377, location 40 (see Figure B).
2. Jumper pin 1 of 74S04 at location 3A
to the feed-through, as shown below.
3. Jumper pin 2 of 74S04 (at location 3A)
to feed-through between pins 1 and
42 of the custom integrated circuit at
location 1 /2C.
Modification for A038575 (new PCBs):
1 . Cut the trace between the custom
chip in location 11 P and the capacitor
labeled C31 (see Figure A).
2. Jumper pin 6 of IC H6 (74LSOO) to
the feed-th rough hole shown in the
illustration.
3. J~mper pin 11 of IC 7D (7 4LS32) to •
pins 4 and 5 of IC H6.
Figure A
WIRE FROM
6H PIN 6
11P
10P
~R176
~ R175
.,.~ /
~ ~ C31
:
'
CUT
TRACE
Atari Inc.
1265 Borregas Avenue
Sunnyvale, California 94086
(I A Warner Commun,cations Company
Game
Player's Name
# of Points
Date and Time
Location
Dig Dug™
Eric Smith
14 years
1,379,450
8/1/82
Spectrum Entertnmt.
Mammoth Lakes, CA
Space Duel'"
Scott Macalino
342,720
5/21/82
1 hr 30 min
Millinocket, ME
Tempes\TM
Eric Glick
18 years
5/22/82
1 hr 30 min
7-11 Store
Houston, TX
--
1,311,290
Promodon
for Profit
September means "back to school "
for students who frequent your location.
And it's the time for you to plan your
"curriculum" of school promotions.
Advertise your locatiof'il in local school
newspapers, including a cuwpon good for
a free ~ame. Or. advertise that players
who bring 1n their ticket stub following a
school football game or other event will
receive a free token. Set up a program
of awarding game tokens for each "A"
or "B" on your players' report cards. Of-
fer to loan games to your local school for
a special student function or fundraiser.
Or, offer to speak to a business class
about setting up and operating a location
or route business.
There are dozens of ways to promote
your business by becoming involved with
your local schools. It will not only encour-
age hundreds of potential players to visit
your l~c~tion, but can improve your im-
age w1th1n the community as well.
Coin Connection Staff
Editor: Laura Burgess
Art Director: Brian Balistreri
First Class
U.S. Postage
PAID
Sunnyvale, CA
Permit 317
§) 1982 Atari Inc. All rights reserved

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