Coin Machine Review (& Pacific ...)

Issue: 1947 January

\'
Automatic Coin-Changer: The Most
Important Post-War Development
This is Fifth in a Series of Studies
on Coh,-Operated Service ,Devices •
. In much the same manner as slug re-
jectors unhinged the portals leading to
"Big Business" for this Industry, so will
automatic coin-changers write a chapter of
far-reaching magn~tude in Coindom's his-
tory.
The increase in sales volume attainable
through this new device, as indi«ated by test
locations, is little short of phenomenaL Cor-
ley M. Phelps, president of the firm manu-
facturing Coin-O-Matic in Renton, Wash.,
reports that play on pin baIl locations has
, jumped up to 40 per cent since instaIlations
were made.
Coin-changers buIl's-eye one of the softest
spots in customers' sales resisting armor:
quicker, more convenient service; and in
doing so, make coin equipment as easily
accessible and as familiar a by-word as the
telephone and automobile.
Loss of machine sales merely because the
'customer hasn't the right change in his
pocket and doesn't have the time, patience
or inclination to procure it, aggregates
thousands of doIlars daily.
A typical example, repeating itself time
and again in various manifestations, is the
·man who approaches a machine--Iet's say
a cigarette vendor-and after delving in
his purse, comes up with a quarter, dime,
nickel, and pennies. The vendor requires
two dimes or a combination of dimes and
nickels equivalent to 20 cents,
The customer grumbles under his breath
and then looks around for the proprietor,
who is either busy with a prospective
purchaser or occupied with some other
task. The customer growls, "Ah, the heIl
with it," and walks next door to a drug
store where he consummates an over-the-
counter transaction.
_
A national survey of coin-changer ' manu-
facturers reveals the following types of
devices-aIl of them containing slug re-
jectors--on the market.
There are three machines which can
either be . mounted on the waIl or plaqed
on a stand_ These are independent units
dispensing nickels only and no merchan-
dise.
Three firms are turning out built-in de-
vices which dispense merchandise and
change simultaneously.
A newspaper vending and change-making
machine has been invented and patented
by a newspaper agent in Arkansas.
One device, now on the planning boards,
is destined to rcvolu~ionize stamp vending
and is the only one which takes a half
dollar and gives change in all denomina-
tions.
It has been estimated that more than two
billion doIlars a year is exchanged through
trade channels via the nickel route. By
supplying nickels quickly, the independent
unit provides the missing link in the chain
of merchandising and customer service. Its
prime purpose is to build added sales and
greater goodwill. Because there is no
charge' for making change and therefore no
direct revenue from the machin~, the most
practicable method of operation is to lease
or rent to the location at a fixed fee.
One of the independent units now being
marketed is the electrically operated Beacon
Coin Changer, manufactured ·by BeIl
Products Co. of Chicago. It is 12 x 24 x 8
inches, weighs 50 pounds, and has one slot
for dimes and another for quarters. Capac-
ity is $40 in nickels.
Coin·O-Matic, manufactured in Renton,
Wash., is made of heavy cast aluminum
and also has dime and quarter chutes.
The Vendo Co. of Kansas City has had
their Vendo Coin , Changer on the market
for approximately eight months; distribu-
tors in a number of key cities have been
appointed.
"Some models of this unit were on test
location at the North American Bomber
Plant in Kansas City during the war,"
states Alex Izzard, Vendo's director of
advertising, "and it was at this time that
we: realized the value of the coin changer
as a means of stimulating vending machine
Both dime and quarter chutes of the
Beacon Coin Changer are receiving a work-
out from customers of the Merchandise
Mart, Chicago.
sales. Because this unit has been developed
over a period of some six years, virtuaIly
no difficulty has been encountered since
their placement for use by the public."
Vendo's product contains a single coin
slot which accepts both dimes and quarters
and dispenses 400 nickels without requiring
a refill. It is 15Y2 inches taIl·and 11 ~ wide.
Locations where individual type coin-
changers have been instaIled include de-
partment stores, drug stores, filling stations,
hotels, theatres, bowling aIleys, restaurants,
taverns, cigar stands, offices, factories, hos-
pitals, and golf courses.
The "Big Three" in built-in changers
are: Johnson Fare Box Co., Chicago;
A.B.T. Mfg. Corp., Chicago; National Slug
Rejectors, Inc., St. LOuis.
AIl three changers are compact, simple
in design, easily instaIled, dispense change
and me!chandise in one operation, load
automatIcally, and embody anti-jackpotting
fea lUres which guarantees correct change
and
overpayment.
Box started their
OPERATOR'S FRIEND
011.
THAT REALLY LUBRICATES
Can't 9um. Especially for Coin Ma.
chines. A few drops will save many
service calls.
1 OZ. BOTTLE 49c
This photograph, taken during'the Demo-
cratic National Convention at the Chicago
Stadium, July 19, 1944, shows Jim Farley,
former Postmaster General, inserting a coin
in a beverage dispenser equipped with a
built-in Harris Automatic Coin Changer.
-SEE-
PAUL A. LAYMON
DISTRIBUTOR
1503 West Plco
OPE RAT
0 R S! Since we insure hundreds of your present and prospective loca-
tions as Insurance Supervisors for the Southern California Tavern Associati n, is it not
"
fjood business for you to insure with us?
Ask the Operators Who Df? So!
Zeigler Insurance Agency I ·Inc.
54J S. Spring St., MIchigan 096'
Spec:1allsts--Co/n Machine Industry
Los Angeles U, CalH.
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
15
Foa
JANUARY
1947
./
COIN
MACHINE
REVIEW
16
FOR
JANUARY
1947
ments on th~ Harris Automatic Coin
Changer a decade ago, and during the past
five years the mechanism has proved itself
under the toughest field tests.
"Only through the long period field test
were we able to determine public abuses
and how to develop features of design to
correct such abuses," says Fred J. Burt,
vice-president.
According to data compiled from oper-
ators in the field, drink dispensers having
Harris Changers outsell non-changer dis-
pensers by more than 25 per cent. The
machine accepts nickels, dimes and quar-
ters through a single slot. The manufac-
turer states that it can be readily adapted
to all types of mechanically or electrically
operated machines handling six-, seven- or
ten-cent items.
The A.B.T. Changer has been in oper-
ation on a number of drink machines for
the past ten months. This device, which
has only one moving part and holds $3.00
in nickels, gives change for a dime only.
"From personal observation and study
over the past three years, I found that the
additional revenue earned by the machine
having a money changer comes from a
ten-cent coin and not from a 25-cent coin,"
W. A. Patzer, A.B.T.'s executive vice-presi-
dent told THE REVIEW. "I think logic alone
will verify my statement. Sixty dimes, in
succession, can be deposited in our money
changer before the tube becomes ex-
hausted."
National's changer is equiP1>ed with a
single slot which takes nickels, dimes · and
quarters and has a capacity of 58 to 63
nickels ( depending on their thickness) .
Two outstanding features are: (1) two
slots, on the side and in front; only one,
however, is visible on the outer casement.
Advantage is that the serviceman has flexi-
bility in installing and can adjust the
changer in the position which will best fit
the particular size and shape of the ma-
chine. (2) If the sales price· rises above
five cents ( the change maker is geared
only for nickel transactions), the service-
man can replace the changer with an
interchangeable unit in a matter of two or
three minutes (the three mounting holes
on the interchangeable unit are in the

Flanked by an assortment of coin-operated equipment in an office building lobby is Vendo's
Coin Changer.
exact position as the ones on the changer;
screws and wiring are also identical) and
can set the interchangeable to vend at a
pre-determined figure. Of course, this nulli-
fies the change-making element because the
customer must have -the required coins. The
interchangeable is particularly popular in
Canada where taxes have raised soft drinks
to seven cents and also in a number of
Southern states where drinks retail at six.
Thos. 1. Heaton of Blytheville, Ark., who
invented a newspaper vendor and change-
making machine, reveals that his device
can be adapted to any machine that is
operated by the movement of a slide across
the face of the coins.
Heaton's mechanism was originally made
for a three-cent opening and was later
adapted to make change for five cents 'when
the single coin was inserted. "It could be
made to take care of any number of coins
and make change for a single larger coin,"
the newspaper agent-inventor declared. He
WE TAKE THE GAMBLE
WHEN YOIJ BIJY FROM IJS!
Any Machine We, Sell Is Guaranteed to Satisfy or the Ship-
ment Can Be Returned Within Five Days After Delivery for
Full Cash Refund of Purchase Price Less the Transportation
charges.
GET OUR PRICES
MILLS
MILLS
MILLS
MILLS
,
GOLD CHROME BELLS
MILLS CHERRY BELLS
SILVER CHROME BELLS
MILLS BONUS BELLS
BROWN FRONT BELLS
MILLS MELON BELLS
BLUE FRONT BELLS
MILLS CLUB CONSOLES
BAKERS PACERS
.
ALL MODELS - ALL COIN PLAYS
We Specialize In RebuildIng Mills S/ofs and Paces !laces
SEE US FOR PACES RACES -
Service and Supplies
BAKER NOVELTY CO.
'.
1700 WASHINGTON BLVD., 'C HICAGp 12, ILL.
describes the operation of his machine
thusly:
"If you insert the required number of
coins, the last coin inserted will operate the
machine and vend the merchandise, or if a
single large coin of certain value is inserted,
the slot adjacent to it, by not having a
coin in it, will let the coin making device
operate ' and dispense a predetermined
amount of change, or if this adjacent slot
is filled with a coin, this coin will lift up
the lever that operates the coin-changer
, and make it inoperable."
. The revolutionary stamp vending ma-
chine, with in-built changer, will vend any
combination of postage stamps (for ex-
ample: 3 threes, 5 airmails, 4 ones). Upon
insertion of a coin (nickel, dime, quarter,
half dollar, or combination of denomina-
tions) the stamps are dispensed at regular
post office prices, with one cent being de-
ducted for making change. In the above
example, total purchase price is 38 cents.
A half dollar in the slot results in the
return of 11 cents.
The change-making stamp machine also
operates independently of the vendor. Any-
one desiring change who doesn't wish to
buy stamps can insert a coin and receive
full value, less one cent.
Six months ago, when coin radios made
their debut, there were five manufacturers
in the field. Today there are 20. In January,
1947, six coin-changer devices are coming
off production lines. By the summer of '47
their number should quadruple, and when
the horns root and roar at the dawning of
1948, coin-changers will be looked upon as
an "old reliable" by the coin-pushing
public.
Do You Need
Arcade Equipment
RAY GUNS
or CONSOLES?
-SEE-
PAUL A. LAYMON
DISTRIBUTOR

Download Page 15: PDF File | Image

Download Page 16 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.