Automatic Age

Issue: 1929 November

T
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other stores the average monthly
earnings are about $15. This may be
partially explained by the superior
locations o f chain stores, but it is
also due in considerable measure to
the fact that automatic selling de­
vices in general are peculiarly well
adapted to chain store merchandising.
W hy A ccuracy Is Vital
Another improvement in scale de­
sign, effected in the interests o f the
retailer, has been in the direction o f
increased simplification. An intricate
scale mechanism, operated by dozens
° f complex springs, is bound to give
the store manager trouble, as the ex­
periences o f hundreds o f stores in the
Past have amply proved. But today
manufacturers
are
bringing
out
scales with as few as thirteen springs
contrasted to the 235 springs actually
found in some scales o f the same
general type.
And along with the increased sim­
plification in scale design have come
marked improvements in scale accur­
acy. That has been one o f the seri­
ous obstacles in the way o f scale
Popularity in the past — the all too
prevalent inaccuracy o f many scales.
When the customer found that his
weight varied from a few ounces to
several pounds in different stores,
naturally he had little confidence in
any scale. But the highest developed
scales on the market today will retain
fractional-ounce accuracy fo r years
with a minimum o f service calls. The
ticket type o f scale, too, now has a
greatly increased capacity fo r tickets,
which means important time economy
to the merchant. The capacity o f the
latest ticket scale o f 10,000 tickets
has been a notable step forward in
scale design.
Winning Public Confidence
Accuracy is being demanded by the
thousands of men and women in
America today who are being weigh­
ed regularly, for they take the matter
© International Arcade Museum
A
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13
seriously. It is not with them, as
doubtless it often was in past years,
a mere diversion o f the moment.
Checking up on their weight period­
ically is being recognized by thou­
sands today as an essential part in
any program o f keeping fit. And this
factor, too, explains the popularity o f
the type o f scale with a permanent
record o f his weight.
In every type o f store today which
is operating along modern lines keep­
ing the goodwill o f the customer is a
paramount consideration. The chains
especially have been driving this
lesson home consistently. Fitting in
with this general aim o f winning cus­
tomer goodwill, the new scale models
are designed to take care o f another
frequent source o f customer dissatis­
faction in the past— that o f the scale
which accepted the coin but did not
register the customers’ weight unless
he took care to be on the scale before
he inserted the coin. But this d'ffi-
culty is eliminated through mechan­
isms wh'ch return the customer’s coin
unless he stands on the scale first.
Thus a frequent source o f complaint
in stores in the past is removed.
Still another phase o f present-day
scale designing which directly con­
cerns the store owner or manager in
a practical way is that o f the size
and weight o f the scale. Store oper­
ators in the past have frequently
complained that it took two or three
men to move a scale into the vesti­
bule o f the store in the morning and
to return it at night. But the use o f
sheet metal cabinet.; and other light
materials in the late scale models, at-
ta'ning liglit weight with no sacrifice
o f strength and durability, together
with roller devices, are taking care o f
this problem. And here, again, is
illustrated
the
general
tendency
among manufacturers o f automatic
(Continued on page 21)
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1,4
T
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The Autom atic Age
T H E N A T IO N A L M A G A ZIN E OF T H E V E N D IN G M A C H IN E
_____________________________ IN D U S T R Y _____________________________
Covering Automatic Machines and Coin-Controlled Devices o f
Every Description
Published Monthly by T H E
L IG H T N E R P U B LISH IN G
O. C. L IG H T N E R , President
CORP.
W A L T E R HU RD , Managing Editor
Official Organ: National Vending Maohine Manufacturers’ Association
Official Organ: Coin Machine Operators’ Ass'n of America
Official
Official
Official
Official
Official
Official
Organ:
Organ:
Organ:
Organ:
Organ:
Organ:
Detroit I Vending Machine Operators’ Association
New York Aroade Owners’ Association
Southwestern Vending Machine Operators’ Association
Cleveland Vending Machine Operators’ Association
Greater New York Coin Machine Operators’ Association
New England Coin Machine Operators' Association
Executive Office, 2810 S. Michigan, Chicago, 111.
CONTRIBUTIONS:
Phone V ictory 1466
Contributions from our readers are always welcome.
AD VERTISING : Rates furnished upon request. Copy suggestions for Advertising prepared with­
out cost or obligation.
Forms close first of publication, month.
SUBSCRIPTION'S: Single copies. 10 cents.
Yearly subscriptions, $1.00 In United States
possessions.
Foreign subscriptions, $1.50.
and
A Book On Automatics
We are pleased to learn that H. W. Alexander, a well
known automatic engineer of New York is writing a book on the
operation of coin machines. We are sure there is a need for this
book and, no doubt, we can sell a great many of them through
the A u t o m a t i c A g e . Sometime ago w*e suggested to Dave Bond
of Boston that he was the logical man to put out such a book.
He is a graduate of Harvard, possesses a splendid command of
the English language and is a man experienced in both operating
and selling coin controlled machines.
But now that Mr. Alexander has taken up the work we feel that
he is equally well qualified. He will want the cooperation of vari­
ous experts in the industry and we hope those whom we have re­
commended as experts in the different branches will give him full
cooperation.
Opportunity To Develop A N ew Machine
T h e i n q u i r i e s t h a t w e h a v e l a t e l y r e c e iv e d f o r m a c h in e s
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