Automatic Age

Issue: 1930 February

A N D T H E EN D IS N O T Y E T
Deep currents of commercial evolution are as irresistible, if
not so showy, as the dramatic tides of industrial revolution. To the
retaiier of 1895 the department store idea was as ominous as the
chain” plan is to the independent of our times. So the men of an
earlier day viewed with alarm the Hanseatic League, the East
ndia and Hudson’s Bay companies, and the organized merchant
adventurers of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
Yet against all dire forebodings and dismal prophecies the indi­
vidual has survived. The explanation then as now is the same.
Personal relations in trade will continue to be a bulwark against
which large combinations will batter in vain.
Nor does the personal relation apply only to the placid pool of
village life where every man, woman, child and dog is known and
called by name. No, the personal touch is as possible and practical
in the teeming impersonal life of the great city where neighbors
are strangers.
Out of the welter of discussion thirty years ago the most accu­
rate statement was:
And the end is not yet .
Each generation has its dreadful hippogriffs of change. Charles
* • Kettering, of General Motors, once remarked, ‘The average man
doesn’t like change, and the business man hates it a little more
than others.’
But change is the immutable law. The innovations of one age
become the familiar practices of the next. Revision, remodeling,
progress everywhere! The inexorable pressure of the new, the
fresh, the original!
We may defy, we may protest, we may issue ultimatums, we
may pass resolutions— even laws, we may sulk in silence, yet the
world does move and the directing force of human activity is for­
ward. The months of this new year are no more of a problem than
he twelve months of the past.
Human nature is still the same. The grasshopper and the ant
Pyeach their age-old sermons that Aesop wrote down. Possibly
here is some competition in which survival is not to the alert and
industrious. The oyster does not worry about competition.
But the eagle is still our national emblem.”
— M erle Thorpe in Nation's Business.
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14
T h e A u t o m a t ic A ge
SOM E PRINCIPLES
OF SLUGPROOF
M E C H A N ISM S
B y H. E . W U R Z B A C H
Research Engineer, Selector Corp.
Slugs — slugs — slugs! Everybody
has a crack at them and probably
some of the things said would not
bear printing. W e have been study­
ing the slug detecting problem for the
past five years, during which time
we conducted many hundred experi­
ments and expended considerable
money and energy in an attempt to
discover the best and most practical
means for ridding the coin controlled
machine of the slug nuisance.
It has been said that a 100 per cent
slug proof mechanism is a physical
impossibility, which, taken literally,
may be true, because a slug may be
made from the identical metal alloy
used in coin manufacture and also the
details of construction, such as knurl­
ed edge, diameter, average impression
on either side with the correct thick­
ness, etc., would of course operate an
otherwise slug proof mechanism.
However, to manufacture slugs with
the above detail would require me­
chanical skill, machinery and the use
of valuable metals that would reduce
the profits between the manufacturer
and the user to proportions that
would be attractive to neither, in
which case there would be little in­
centive to take the risk of public criti­
cism or possible prosecution for con­
tributing to a fraudulent practice.
Such perfection in slug detection may
never be required in merchandising
machines, but will likely be necessary
© International Arcade Museum
on change making machines above the
10 cent denomination in case of their
extensive use in places void of attend­
ance. A slug detecting mechanism
such as the above can be made and
may become necessary at some future
date, but would hardly warrant ex­
tensive production at this time, in
view of the fact that there are thou­
sands of merchandising machines
now in operation or perfected that
must have immediate protection
against slugs to preserve their ex­
istence.
In considering the field of merchan­
dise machines, we have the 5 cent
merchandise and play machines in
first place, the 10 and 25 cent ma­
chines in second place, and the 50 cent
machines in third place, with the
$1.00 machine in the future.
It is obvious that the most economic
application of slug detection lies in
the selecting of the best possible se­
lector for the particular application;
that is, a 25 cent machine would likely
require better protection than a 5
cent machine. Adequate slug protec­
tion does not necessarily mean that
100 per cent perfection is necessary
or economical, because the 100 per
cent machine would necessarily be
more expensive in first cost and have
greater maintenance costs.
The trouble with practically all
coin operated machines in service to­
day is not due to the fact that they
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