Mechanical Memories Magazine

Issue: 2009-September - Issue 37

Anatomy of a Clown
Part II
By John Peterson
If your memory is superior to mine , (not much of a challenge, I will admit,) please
forgive me while I recap our story up to this point. At the end of Anatomy of a Clown,
part I, I was awaiting delivery of my latest love, a Bajazzo or clown catching game that
I purchased in an Ebay auction. The game was non-working but advertised as being
complete - maybe - and with several features that began to make me think, after I had
already made the successful bid, that the game was not original. Two items in particular
that caused the most doubt were the hinges that definitely had something funky going
on, and the domed top to the case, a feature that I had never, ever seen on a clown
catcher. My concern was that I had purchased a composite game, one where the original
door and mechanism had been added to a much later (and incorrect) case.
'
Page 6
The Day of Reckoning arrived. The doorbell rang and Greg, my main UPS man smiled as
he delivered the oversize box. I tore into it and carefully removed my treasure. I could
hear a ball rolling inside the mechanism so I did what any proud owner would do; I
deposited a coin and held my breath as I activated the ball-lift lever. Boink! Something
dropped inside the case. I opened it up and there, lying on the bottom of the case, was a
small blue marble. These games are made to operate on a steel ball bearing. A glass
marble is too light to trigger the inner workings of the game. I replaced the marble with
the correct size bearing and activated the game with another coin. As I raised the ball-lift
lever again, I heard the same sound only louder this time as the steel bearing fell out of
its holder on the way to the top entry hole.
Now would be a good time to explain how this game works. Photo A is the ball lift
arm at rest at the bottom of the arc. You can see the ball resting in its 'carry' position at
the end of the lift arm. Using the 'T' handle on the right side of the front of the game, the
player is able to lift the arm from its full 'down' position to the full 'up' position where
the ball enters the top of the playfield. After a round of the game played, win or lose, the
ball is retained inside the mechanism at a 'gate.' Putting a coin into the coin slot opens
the gate and releases the ball, which rolls down into the carry position at the end of the
lift arm.
Photo A
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Download Page 6: PDF File | Image

Download Page 7 PDF File | Image

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

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