Mechanical Memories Magazine

Issue: 2011-October - Issue 59

The tale of the pinball glass
Idleness can be the mother of disaster, certainly this proved to be the case in a certain
arcade (The Empire). In the mid 1950s, machine attendants, perhaps to save
themselves work, 'forgot' to secure the nuts on the bolts that held down the wooden
strip at the front of a pintable glass. In the event of a stuck ball or guide spring, the
usual procedure should have been: unlock and open the front door, remove the cash
box, place hand inside, unscrew the nuts from the retaining bolts, lift off the wooden
strip, slide out the glass, un stick what was stuck and then do everything in reverse.
Not so in this case. With the long bolts being devoid of nuts, just lift the wooden strip
up and slide down the glass. No problem.
A row of (mainly al/win) wall machines. L to R: Brenner Ball Past the Arrow, Shefras
Chocolate al/win, Al/win Deluxe, Bryans Payramid, BMCo al/win, two Saxony al/wins
with top pediments and one unidentified al/win .
Page 13
Our discovery happened one day when we were (I suppose that you would call it
loitering) in the arcade, near the jukebox. It must be stated that the arcade was in its
early stages, a large droughty former roller rink with avenues created by suspended
giant sheets of hessian sacking, the machines lining the route or residing in various
nooks and crannies. All very spooky. One of our little crowd, who was picking about
with the machine edging suddenly announced that the bolts would lift out.. ..... and an
idea was born!
Creeping stealthily to the end of the sacking avenue to make sure that Harold was
safely behind the cash desk, we slid back the glass and tap tap tapped with a pencil on
the score buffers. I think you needed to attain 12,000 to win 3d and 16,000 to get 6d.
So having 'won' 6d and the glass having been replaced, somebody went to fetch
Harold to verify how well we'd done, and he paid out the due tanner. Each quarter of
an hour or so, one of us would nip round to claim a win, 3d here, 6d there, trying not
to be too greedy. However, the rate of pennies exiting the cask desk must have been a
little out of the ordinary; so much so, that Harold decided to satisfy his curiosity.
Early (pre flipper) electro-mechanical pin tables
and Rotary Merchandiser in the left foreground.
Page 14

Download Page 13: PDF File | Image

Download Page 14 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.