Play Meter

Issue: 1976 February - Vol 2 Num 2

mailbox
Very much enjoyed John Os-
borne's article in t he December
1975 Play Meter .
Douglas W. Caldwell
9400 SW Coral
Portland, Ore.
ince being given a copy of
your fir t complimentary is ue
and ub equently ubscribing to
you r publication, I have t hor -
oughly enjoyed reading and being
informed of the latest develop-
ment in the coin machine indu -
t ry .
Victor Zulicki
68 MacPherson St.
Melbourne, Australia
When your [directory) que -
tion naire arrived I wa in the
ho pital with major surgery. I
would have liked very much to
have been in your directory , a
we ha ve been in t he same location
ince 1938 and had previous coin
ex perience before that time . We
were t he fir t Valley pool table
di t ributor and handle Meadows
Games and other video games .
Your magazine is one of the
mo t comprehensive that has
been is ued in t he past few years .
Budge Wright
Owner
Western Distributors
1226 SW 16th Ave.
Portland, Ore .
(Thank you, Mr. Wright, for
letting us know some of the
• Game u.ses a light dl.splay -
"0 mO"iro,.
• Playe,.s compete di,.ecUy agal"st
each othe,.
• Fast, easy se,.lIice
• Solid state depe"dability - full
one yea,. wa,.,.a"ty 0" logic boa,.d
• Game use.s lights u"de,."eath
sl"l.Ic,.ee"ed playi"g field
• Top made of u"b,.eallable
Lexo" ' plastic
• St,.O"g and beautiful wal"ut
cabine t with ha,.dwood t,.im and
Spanish leathe,. fo,.mica top
manufacturers you represent.
Your company was listed in our
directory despite the fact the
questionnaire m issed yOu.- -
Editor)
Thank you for yo ur 12/ 75
art icle on t he new apprenticeship
prog ram in Wi sco ns in. Your
magazi ne is an instrume ntal part
of promoting not only our organi-
zation, but the entir e coin ma-
chine indu try.
Len Roulier
Executive Director
Wisconsin Music Merchants Ass.
1109 N. Mayfair Rd.
Wauwatosa, Wisconsin
EDCOE Mfg. & Service Co.
9512 W . Jefferson Blvd . , Culver City,
Ca lifornia 90230
Phone ( 213) 836-3603
Or , co ntact your loca l distributor .
Thank you for your rece nt
ue with t he newe t model and
nomenclature features on the
eq uipment.
Ronald E. Abelson
President
Midfield Vending Co.
1201 DeSoto Road
Baltimore, Md.
I
You are doing a good job. I only
wish more manufacturers would
place ad and photos of their
game in t he magazine.
Lloyd L. Grice
United Distributors
2129 Cedar Hill Rd.
J efferson City , Mo.
PlAt' METER
11

cOlnman
f the month
Briton depicts
operating

methods In
UK
A Play Meter intelView
with Peter Groom,
British operator
internationalflavor our
Play Meter, Editor and Publisher Ralph Lally
interviewed a British operator about the unusual
operating system used in the United Kingdom.
Peter Groom started in the coin-op amusements
business in England 15 years ago as a distributor
for See burg Corp. Eventually, the distributorship
was broken up and sold off in various parts, he said.
He didn't enter the operating field just yet,
diverting instead into a company called Phono-
graphic Equipment. After a stint with that group,
he then entered operating as part of a company
called Gainsmead Ltd.
With his knowledge of the distribution of phono-
graphs in Britain, he very capably fiUed a position
with his current company, Mam Inn Play Ltd., one
of the largest national phonograph operating
concerns in Great Britain.
Mam Inn Play operates some 10,000 jukeboxes,
w hich is quite a lot w hen one takes into
consideration there are only 64,000 licensed pre-
mises (authorized locations) in the country. And
most of those premises are owned by one of the 70
national brewery concerns in England. Perhaps,
only 18 per cent of the locations are owned by
individuals as "free houses, " Groom said.
Servicing all those jukeboxes, as weU as the
amusement devices operated by the firm, such as
fruit machines, amusement-with-payout machines,
pinbaU machines and a few video and pool games,
requires the efforts of a massive decentralized
system based on regional offices, Groom noted,
giving the firm a repair caU answering time of an
hour to most locations.
The British system of licensing amusement
devices and the method of operating them is
examined in this conversation with Groom. It is an
interesting and often confusing system for the
uninitiated A merican, but it leads itself to compar-
ison with the multitude of systems evident in the
United states.
The American must keep in mind while reading
about the highly competive British operating world
that the British have a valuable market in games
that are not considered gambling devices, but
which pay in cash, tokens and/or prizes.
Not only do they have to cope with government
regulating boards and the breweries that get a cut
of their income, but they also have to battle an
image problem that is in some ways worse than the
problem A merican operators have suffered from for
so long, Groom said.
.
Groom seems prosperous enough, however, and
apparently not threatened by the system. While at
the Amusement Trades Exhibition, he told Play
Meter his views of the operating situation in
Britain.
PLA Y METER: How did it strike you to become
completely immer ed in operating as opposed to
distributing? Did you find it more lucrative for
in tanc , or more profitable?
GROOM: It wa perhap more profitable, but al 0 a
\ . ' / ' f!
12
lIex l pag e)

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