Coin Slot

Issue: 1980 October 068

Coin Slot Magazine - #068 - 1980 - October [International Arcade Museum]
wmamamm ■■■■■■■■ ■■HIHI
MACHINE NAME
DESCRIPTION
DATE ON DRAWING
PINBALL GUIDES*
Pylon
June 17, 1940
April 1940
Stars
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Dec. 26, 1940
Feb.1941
Sunbeam
Schematic
Feb. 17, 1941
Feb. 1941
New Jeep
Lone Star
Landslide
Starlite (Regular)
Starlite (Free Play)
Leader
Zombie
Duplex
June 18, 1940
(Not Listed)
June 28, 1940
July 1940
July 2, 1940
July 1940
Aug. 12, 1940
(Not Listed)
Aug. 12, 1940
(Not Listed)
Aug. 24, 1940
July 1940
Oct. 28, 1940
Nov. 1940
Dec. 6, 1940
Nov. 1940
DO-RE-MI
Schematic
March 18, 1941
May 1941
Double Play
Schematic
April 18, 1941
May 1941
Skyblazer
May 21, 1941
May 1941
June 20, 1941
Aug. 1941
July 22, 1941
Aug. 1941
Oct. 2, 1941
Nov. 1941
Dec. 23, 1941
Feb.1942
March 2, 1942
Feb. 1942
1942
(Not Listed)
World Tour
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
Schematic
(No Date)
(Not Listed)
Stars Jeep
Schematic
May 1942
(Not Listed)
Big Hit
Schematic
(No Date)
Feb. 1946
Fast Ball
Schematic
July 29, 1946
July 1946
Baseball Pitch
Drawings, Panel
(No Date)
(Not Listed)
Fiesta
Schematic
Nov. 16, 1946
Nov. 1946
Smoky
Schematic
Dec. 12, 1946
March 1947
Vanities
Schematic
Jan. 20, 1947
Feb. 1947
Mystery (Regular)
Schematic
Feb. 25, 1947
Feb. 1947
Mystery (Free Play)
Schematic
Feb. 25, 1947
Feb.1947
Crossfire
Schematic
March 1, 1947
May 1947
Ranger
Schematic
May 12, 1947
July 1947
Man'selle
Schematic
July 3, 1947
Aug. 1947
Coed
Schematic
Sept. 18, 1947
Nov. 1947
Tally Ho
Schematic
Sept. 30, 1947
Nov. 1947
Star Lite
Schematic
Oct. 1, 1947
Nov. 1947
Treasure Chest
Schematic
Dec. 1, 1947
Dec. 1947
Build Up
Diagram, reply bank
(No Date)
Jan.1948
Banjo (Regular)
Schematic
Jan. 30, 1948
March 1948
Banjo
Diagrams, relay strip
Feb. 13, 1948
March 1948
Samba
Schematic
April 2, 1948
April 1948
Samba
Diagrams, Wiring
April 7, 1948
April 1948
Jamboree
Diagrams, relays
May 10, 1948
May 1948
Jamboree
Schematic
June 4, 1948
May 1948
West Wind
Knockout
Bigparade
Air Circus
Sky Chief
Live Power
1948 Short Stop
Schematic
July 10, 1948
May 1948
Circus
Schematic
Aug. 18, 1948
Aug. 1948
Contact
Schematic
Sept. 13, 1948
Oct. 1948
Contact
Hold-over switches
Oct. 11, 1948
Oct. 1948
Contact
Kicker Instructions
(No Date)
Oct. 1948
Morocco
Schematic
Nov. 3, 1948
Nov. 1948
Magic
Schematic
Dec. 31, 1948
Nov. 1948
Playtime
Schematic
Jan. 1\ 1949
Aug. 1949
Swannee
Schematic
Jan. 1949
Jan.1949
Swannee
Diagram, relay change
Feb. 18, 1949
Jan. 1949
Gondola
Schematic
May 4, 1949
May 1949
Tumbleweed
Schematic
Jan. 9, 1949
Aug. 1949
Shanty Town
Schematic
Sept. 1949
Oct. 1949
Schematic
Nov. 1949
Feb. 1950
May 1950
June 1950
Campus
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Jeanie
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Playland
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Jeanie
Instructais, drawing
(No Date)
June 1950
Schematic
July 1950
July 1950
Schematic
Aug. 1950
Aug. 1950
Schematic
Oct. 1950
Oct. 1950
Schematic
Nov. 1950
Jan. 1951
wmmmmmm ■■■■
OCTOBER,
1980
© The
International
Arcade Museum
THE COIN SLOT — 11
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
Coin Slot Magazine - #068 - 1980 - October [International Arcade Museum]
Have You Ever Seen One Of These?
SOUNDIES
Continued from page 1
The Mills Panoram SOUNDIES are completely made
under the direction of James Roosevelt's Globe Produc
tions, Inc. The SOUNDIE represents a new motion picture
art, specialized for the first time by Mr. Roosevelt, who
long has been studying the special
producing
movies
requirements for
for coin-operated
machines. The
SOUNDIE, unlike the regular movie, has to get itself over
with the public inside of three minutes, instead of an hour
or two. It is very much different, too, from the fifteen-
minute movie short which you have seen in your theatre.
All movies, heretofore, were created with the intention of
being seen only once by the same persons. . .SOUNDIES
must be so good, so rich in fast and concentrated action
and meaning, that the same persons may want to see the
very same film fifty or more times! Such is this intriguing
new development now introduced by James Roosevelt.
Each business ran its separate course for forty long
Jimmy Roosevelt starts a new industry.
years. Suddenly a chance invention, precipitated out of
the crying need for a new type of amusement in some
600,000 public locations where people gather, conscious
ly or unconsciously demanding coin-operated entertain
ment, brings about the magic reunion. In Mills Panoram
SOUNDIES,
coin
machines
and
the
movies,
long-
separated brother, unite once more, each giving to the
other a new vitalization, excitement and appeal!
It was only natural that the development of Panoram, the
new movie machine, fell to the lot of coin-machine
engineers. Panoram is first, last and always a coin machine.
It is automatic—all it waits for is a dime and then it must do
its stuff with split-second reflex, never hesitating, never
failing.
No attendant can be kept at its side to start it and stop it
and see that nothing goes wrong. The patron who drops
his dime has done all that can be expected, so Panoram
can't ask him to cooperate by turning a crank, lifting a gate
or do a single bit of work.
Since the human being couldn't operate the Panoram
even if he were asked to do so, Panoram has to be even
more than
human,
doing things that only a perfect
machine can do, in a standard, never-changing fashion.
Panoram must take the small 16 mm. film, and by a route
of perfectly engineered clean-cut angles project that film,
so that a clear, brilliant image appears on its big screen.
Panoram in one small, self-contained unit has to control
and direct a beam of light which ordinarily would take a
minimum projection of at least thirty feet across a room.
Panoram's projected beam has to end right where it
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She drops a dime and Panoram delivers thefascinating soundie.
12—
THE COIN Arcade
SLOT Museum
©
The International
starts—on the screen of its own cabinet. For no coin-
operated
machine can
be properly considered to be
completely automatic until it is all in one unit, locked up
and protected against the prying hands of the public.
Panoram has to stand alone, for days on end, and keep
operating without a whimper, without its service door ever
being opened! Remarkable, of course, when you
remember it's a complete sound-movie machine! But
certainly nothing more than any coin-machine man could
ask of the most insignificant coin machine made.
OCTOBER, 1980
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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