Leisure Play

Issue: 1981-September - Vol.Num 2 Issue 9

assembly process. Work·
ing this way a man can
assemble an A WP in two
hours, a small video in
one and a half hours and
a Club machine in three
hours."
Bell-Fruit attach great
importance to the oper·
ating side of their
business. This is conduc·
ted on a nation-wide basis
with six divisional offices
and the man in overall
charge is Gordon Dean,
Deputy Chairman and
Managing
Director,
Operations. It is thought to
be one of the biggest, if
not
the
biggest,
operations in the United
Kingdom. Their cus·
tomers include NAAFI
and the Three Services.
This part of the operation
includes big sites on
Army bases in West
Germany.
Marketing Director of
the
operating
UK
Company Tony Darling
said: "We supply all the
major breweries in the
United Kingdom and
clubs, free trade, hotel
groups, leisure centres,
and many other sites. We
operate every type of coin
operatel equipment
including A WPs, Club
Machines, Joke Boxes,
Video, Pool and other
amusement equipment.
One of the interesting
points about the video
boom is that in some
areas they have cracked
the market for other
types of machines. At the
height of the boom there
was a mad scramble to
get video games installed
in all sorts of premises
that had previously had
no coin operated equip·
ment at all. But when the
video takings began to fall
a bit, quite a number of
the people who owned
these sites started looking
towards A WPs. Video
game machines have
definitely been instru·
mental in breaking new
ground for other equip·
ment.
• Andy Brown about to start on the final assembly of a fruit
machines.
• A general view of the cabinet w orkshop.
Page Twelve
Leisure Play - September
• Tony Darling, left, Marketing Director, Operations
Allen Payne, Publicity Director.
"Service is, of course,
vital to any operation and
we attach great impor-
tance to this aspect of the
business. It is also
important to pay attention
to detail, For instance,
when we approached
Chinese takeaway propri-
etors we had a letter
specially written in
Chinese and the owners
were delighted that some-
body had gone to the
trouble of writing to them
in their own language."
The Bell-Fruit Manu-
facturingCompanyemploy
800 people but there are
2,250 employees through-
out the Group. The skills
of these people are
diverse and apart from
production techniques in-
clude metalwork, elec-
tronic research and
development, screen prin-
ting, cabinet making,
electronic assembly and
artwork.
The principle technical
advance at Bell-Fruit in
recent years has been the
introduction of micro-
processor driven fruit
machines and they are
proud of the fact that
they are an estimated two
years ahead of the
Americans in this re-
spect. All machines
leaving the company are
micro-processor con-
trolled and during the last
two or three years a great
deal of electronic exper-
tise has been acquired.
Bell-Fruit could never
be described as an
inward looking company
and among their export
customers are companies
in West Germany, Spain,
Monaco, Austria, Switzer-
land and Ireland. There
are Bell-Fruit subsidiary
companies in the USA,
Australia, and Holland
and established business
arrangements throughout
Europe.
Bell-Fruit machines are
sold to operators world-
wide and are to be found
in far-flung corners of the
globe. As Publicity Direc-
tor Allen Payne pointed
out: " You can find Bell-
• M aterial b eing shaped for cabinet assembly.
Leisure Play - September
• Philip Bedborough in the Screen Print department.
Fruit maclnnes in newly
emerged Bophuthats-
wana, approaching the
southern tip of Africa."
Even the history of the
Bell-Fruit original build-
ing at Leen Gate is
fascinating. It used to be
a Priory inhabited by
French monks and over
the years there have been
reported sightings of the
"Black Monk!" It was also
a tannery for many years.
In 1962 the building
was converted into a
series of small workshops
and the only access was
through the old Priory
archway -
still the
access for vehicles. One
of thse workshops housed
the Premier Cash Register
Company, a firm which
dealt in adding machines
as well as cash registers.
It was that company
which formed the basis of
the first Bell -Fruit
company in England. The
Cope Allman Interna-
tional Group acquired the
business in 1966. It was
about this time that the
present Chairman, Dr. Bill
Pilkington, joined Bell-
Fruit and soon after-
wards an era of substan-
tial growth and diversifi-
cation commenced.
In 1968 the company
produced their first
electro mechanical fruit
machine called Full
House. These machines
were so popular and so
well made that a few are
still to be found in pubs
deep in the heart of the
English countryside.
Bell-Fruit, known and
respected in the amuse-
ment machine industry
throughout the world,
have come a long way
since the days of the Full
House. Although the tech-
nology used in their
current machines has
changed beyond recogni-
tion, the company still
insist on the same strict
standards of quality ,
workmanship and play
appeal that have enabled
a number of Full House
machines to survive 13
years of constant use.
• Don Anderson, brother of Notts Forest and England
footballer, Viv Anderson, working in Sub Assembly.
Page Thirteen

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