Play Meter

Issue: 1975 June-July - Vol 1 Num 7

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June/July, 1975
P1AW IIIETER Volume 1 /
" ' U'.'(
features
.G etting Together by Association
1) 1'1

J~
30
38
T chnl al dltor P rry Miller discovers companies who
Wi ll han both th app arance o f your dYlllg Video
upn ts and th Ir IIlsld s Mill r sees much future
pot ,ntlalln thi s new aspec t of th Industry and ob tains
COlllm illS bou t th ne d for such s rVlces from th e
p l OllS who provld th m .
'Black Box' Secrets Revealed
47
An I Cll onlCS manu fac tur r decides th cOlll lndustry
n ds help learnlllg to maintain and s rVlce ItS new
OfJhlS tl ated equlpm III and se ts out to accomplish
Ihat oal by offenng distributor -sponsored cou rses that
f .lbolll all o f th em
departments
From the Editor
Mailbox
Coinman of the Month
staff
Editor and Publi sher:
Ralph C. Lally II
Assoc lat Edi tor :
Sonny Albarado
Editorial ASSistant :
Del Legget t
East Coast Contributing Editor :
Robert E. Haim
Technical Editor :
Perry Miller
Art Direc tor :
Roy Willis
Produc tion ASSistant :
Steve Heber t
Circula tion Manag r:
Carol P. Lally
Typography :
Ad com
AdvertiSing Represen tatives :
Ralph C. Lally II
Del Legge tt
(,',,' tlil . : Jun ~-July covu phOIO, Paul Sylv~J /u;
"Coinman" phOloJ COur/ ~Jy of Alari In c,;
Copyrighl arlicil! phOIOJ co urlt!Jy of MOA and
ChaJr SludioJ LId., WQJ hinglon , D.
Kur: ·
KilJch pholOJ. Ralph C. Lillly 1/; Robul Palmt!T
ph 0 10 co /lrl ny of 1. lanti R uortlJ; all jllu Jlra/jon J
by R oy WilljJ.
c.;
6
11
13
Vld 0 emp ror r IIv s pas t , looks forward
Operating
a ... , .. It •
MEMBER
With th Introducti on of a solid -state pinball game
apfJ. r ntly Imminent, ASSOCiate dltor Sonny Albarado
ell It commen ts from the major pinball manufacturers
a out th ell soli d state plans and diSCUSses the potential
o f solid stat fllpp rs with lectronlCS specialists and the
man who h Ip d d sig n what may be th e Irrst marketed
com u tenzed plngam .
Old Videos Get 'Religion'
U" . - l U ' .
'ID@G ,
24
Staff writ r Del Le ett observ s that new state
op rators' associa ti ons are comrng alive all over with a
VI or H talks with vanous aSSOCiation heads an d MOA
o ffi cials abou t why state organizations are needed and
how to go about putting on tog th er .
Computerized Pinball
No.7
18
Copyngh t x mptlon
Pocket Change
21
Distributing
26
FTC noops round Industry, again
Manufacturing
International Dateline
New Products
Technical Topics
On the Move
Feedback
37
Classifieds
57
40
42
45
46
56
PLA Y METER IS published monthly by
Skyblrd Publishing Company Inc .
PLAY METER, June·July 1975, Volume 1,
Number 7 . Publishing Offices, 4136 W ash ·
In lOn Avenue , P.O. Box 24170, New
Orl ailS , La . 70184 . Telephone (504 )
827 0320. Printing Offices, Franklin Print ·
In Co ., 209 MagaZine SI. , New Orleans,
La . Contro lled circu lati on at New Orleans,
La . SUbscription rates : U. S. and Canada ··
S20; Europ and Japan ·· S35; Elsewhere ··
S40. Multiple subscnp tl ons (ordered at one
tim )' 29,S 17 each; 10-24 , S15each;250r
mor , S 1 0 each . AdvertiSing rates on
requ Sl. Copyngh t 1975 by Skybird Pub ·
II hlng Company . No part of thiS magazllle
may b repro du c d Without ex pr ess
permission . Th e trad emar ks , PLAY
M -T R nd COIN INDUSTRY PLAY
METE R, are regls t red . The edi tors are not
responsible for unsolicited con tnbutlons.
Postmas ter : Send fo rm 3579 to Play
Meter, P.O. Box 24 170, New Orlea ns, La .
70184 .
5
FROM THE EDITOR
Calendar
July 25·27:
Montana Coin Machine Operators
association, annual convention. Out·
law Inn, Kalispell, Montana.
Sept. II·U:
norida Amusement Merchandising
Association, annual convention.
hera ton Towers Hotel, Orlando,
Florida.
ept. 18·20:
West Virginia Music and Vending
Association, annual convention.
Heart O'Town Motor Hotel, Char·
lestion, West Virginia.
ept.19·28:
Illinois Coin Machine Operators
Association, annual convention.
Lincolnshire Marriott, N. W. Sub·
urban Chicago, Illinois.
ept.27·28:
North Carolina Coin Operators As·
sociation, annual convention. Holi·
day Inn, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Oct. 2·4:
Music Operators of Virginia, annual
convention. Howard Johnson Motor
Lodge, Richmond, Virginia.
Oct. 16·19:
NationaJ Automatic Merchandising
Association, annual national con·
vention and exhibit. The Rivergate,
New Orleans, La.
Oct. 17·19:
Music Operators of America, na'
tional annual convention and exposi·
tion. Conrad Hilton Hotel, Chicago,
Illinois.
6
We passed a sort of halfway mark when we published the May issue of
Play M e le r. It was issue number six. It was our first issue on which we
used our own typesetting equipment. It marked an achieved paid
circulation of nearly 20 per cent of our original complimentary mailings.
And it wa our largest advertising revenue producer up to that point.
But amidst all that progress, I still felt we had failed in one of our
goals--getLing operators and other readers to give us a piece of their
minds. While we receive many letters praising us in general for our good
work, we eldom receive any mail commending us for a specific article,
criticizing us for something we've said or commenting about personal or
indu try· wide problems.
It's not that I don't appreciate those generalized letters we get-owe
thrive on them. But, to cite an example, we sometimes hear, always
second-hand, that o-and-so had this or that to say about something they
read in Pia M l e r. Yet, only once have we ever seen anything in writing
or heard anything by phone from the horse's mouth.
To me, uch incidents point to a severe problem within the industry, a
problem that may be too widespread to correct. It's called apathy. But
it's not apathy alone; it's coupled with a sort of industry isolationism.
From my experience, apathy in the industry starts at the top, with the
manufacturers. Too many of them care only about their newest product.
Problems that have developed with earlier models rarely concern them,
even when those early machines continue to be money-makers for
operators located out of the industry mainstream.
This apathy tends to spread downward to the distributor, though
di tributor apathy isn't caused by a lack of concern for the operator. The
operator is his bread and butter. What happens to the distributor is that
he gets caught in the middle, which forces him to become the chief
buck-passer. Warranties shrink to nothing, but he still must sell his
manufacturer's product. Parts dwindle in supply as time passes until
they're as carce as buffalo nickels, yet he has to try to keep his
cu tomers happy by having repair facilities available.
The complaints and the problems mount impossibly until he's just too
tired to do anything about it except point at the the other guy and say,
"What do you want me to do? It's their fault."
This apathy and apparent inability to find common goals drifts further
downward to the operator, who, faced with flimsy excuses and false
promi es from the people who are supposed to help him, gets tired of
banging his head against the wall. He finally just shrugs his shoulders,
scratches his head and wonders what he's doing in this business
anyway. If he's been around a while, he'll probably just go on struggling
in the dark , bitter and apathetic about trying to improve his lot or the lot
of his peers.
I hope to change that with this issue of PLay Mel e r. We've ~reated a
ne w "Bull Sheet," a tear-out, postage-paid card that will hopefully teU
us a little about our readers and a little about us, too. You'll find it on
page 51.
If you feel you've been ripped 0((, abused or treated fairly or if you
think omething we've said makes sense, i inaccurate or just plain .
crazy, we invite you to fill out the card, fold it and mail it to us.
We aren't trying to create dissension or controversy within the
indu try by doing this. We're only trying to open lines of communication
that seem to have rusted shut long ago and let fresh air into stale rooms .
I hope you feel tha t wa y, too.

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