Mechanical Memories Magazine

Issue: 2013-March - Issue 74

Strange but True
Part 3
B y Robert Rowland
Back in 1965, the Marine Pastimes arcade here in Mablethorpe housed a very large,
floor-standing electro-mechanical machine called Calypso. It was a two-sided, ten
player machine (five playing sections each side) with each section allowing you to bet
on one of five colours, which were red, green, yellow, white and blue. Each play
section had a compact five coin entry, with a small round circle of each colour above
each corresponding slot. You could bet on all five colours if you wanted.
At the start of play, large size coloured balloons would start to flash randomly,
and at the same time, a large clock with a single pointer showing the odds would start
to rotate in an anti-clockwise direction . When the balloons stopped flashing, one
would remain lit and seconds later the clock pointer would stop, showing the odds for
that win. The 12 O'clock position was the one you wanted, as it was the only position
on the clock that paid 12d; all the other payouts were 2d, 4d and 6d. As stated on the
machine 's top-flash 'one colour must win', there was no lost position. This was a good
machine for me personally, feeling up the payout trays on each of the individual
sections. I flicked the metal chute with my fingers, which nearly always resulted in
pennies dropping down that were lodged up in the chute. This did prove profitable
back in 1965.
Thi s mac hine really stood out in the centre of the arcade; it really was an
awesome sight. I do wish I could find a picture of this machine. However, the other
week I was round at my good friend David Lascelles' house and he was running
through some old cine film that he had taken back in 1962. There was a tiny five
second clip of Calypso on his film - I was truly over the moon; I really thought that
the only image of Calypso was stored in my head . The footage was taken at night, and
the machine is also surrounded by players, but I believe this five second clip is
possibly the only footage that exists. To see this exclusive clip of Calypso, get onto
Youtube and search: mmm calypso clip.
I never saw another Calypso, despite holiday trips to other seaside resorts in the
1960s. As for the only Calypso machine in Mablethorpe, it was broken up in 1971
when decimalisation came in .
In the early 1970s I was friendly with one of the mechanics in Bingoland, and he knew
I was interested in machines. One day in the arcade, he came up to me and said "I've
got four machines going cheap if you want them." I just said yes, I didn' t even ask
what they were!
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Two days later, a car and trailer pulled up outside our house with four machines all
tightly strapped down. I can't remember how much I paid for them but can't have
been much because I was still in my last year at school. The machines I ended up with
were two Bradley Challengers (the earlier all metal type), a Bryans Trickier and a
Steer-a-ball. I played these newly-acquired machines at home for a couple of weeks,
but sadly, I became bored with them.
The Trickier upset me because you used to get ten balls dropping down the
playfield, one at a time, and if you caught them you scored 1, 2 or 3. However, when a
ball was caught in the 3 points section, the score pointer only moved one position
instead of three, and I had no idea how to fix this problem. Looking back, it was .
probably only a little adjustment needed to fix, but at the time I just thought he had
sold me a load of rubbish!
The Steer-a-Ball was a bit of a challenge for the fust few days, but I also soon got
fed up with that. The large steel ball was workable down to the bottom row, but then it
always seemed to roll past the 'home' hole and into the lost. I was even trying to lift
my own machine, despite its weight, to get that ball to drop into the home (coin return)
winning hole. To be honest, they were not the sort of machines that I was brought up
on. The size of the Steer-a-Ball didn' t help, as I only had a small shed to myself at the
bottom of the garden to keep my machines.
Within three months both of those machines were sold on; I can't even remember
who ended up getting them. Regarding the two Challengers, these are machines I did
play in the 1960s, but being young and foolish, within six months the main front
glasses on both machines were broken. I remember one of the machines tipping over,
and smash went that glass; I think the other met a similar fate. After this, I started
messing with them, pulling parts off here and there, and eventually what was left of
them ended up in the dustbin . Believe it or not, it was all good fun at the time. Of
course, it's now 2013 and I could cry to think I actually owned those machines. I
would now welcome all four back with open arms. Strange but true.
Robert Rowland
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