There's a story with this one though:
There's this guy Alex in Edmonton who's doing what you kind of wish every antique dealer did: Make regular videos about things in the shop!
I was watching a video of his and of course my eyes immediately go to the bits of coin-op at the sides of the frame.
His store is called Curiosity Inc and I sent him an email, and we quickly struck a deal for the Fill Em Up!
It should be noted he has a bunch of other coin-op in his store, including 3 EM pinball machines, some slots, another allwin, and a classic trade stimulator. He is an expert shipper, and if you're in the Edmonton area you should definitely know where he's at. Some pics he sent me:
We are living in interesting and difficult times, so it's fascinating to see businesses adapt and cope however they can. If that interests you, I would highly recommend following Alex and the Curiosity Inc exploits in how he's dealing with this time. I even get a mention just after the 6 minute mark here:
It's been interesting to see him entirely overhaul his store during the time off. He also has a great series where he buys a house that was packed full due to years of a hoarding condition, empties, cleans, and fixes it up, and then reveals the owner's identity, promotes and auctions her famous pottery, meets her before she dies at over 100, and then publishes a book on her.
My game arrived safe and sound in this absolute tank of a hand-made shipping crate. Gloves were used, all surfaces disinfected, all packing materials disposed of, and gloves sent off to decontaminate for 4 days.
Cleaned myself and the machine surfaces, but really there's no risk on the internals because coronavirus can't live on surfaces for 5 days.
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Get it down and realize... no key! There was a keyed wedged in the gap on the front but it had fallen in. I messaged some friends "HOW DO I PICK THIS LOCK?" and finally got it going once I assembled the correct tools. (I had a few bad tries, but that tiny screw driver and the dental pick did the trick. Dental picks are essential tools)
Worst case scenario I could have drilled it out, but with the key inside, I really didn't want to.
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*total hacker voice* I'm in On the right is the original key, rescued. A little bent but still working great |
It even has the original coin box! Wow this is going to need a cleaning. And I'm going to have to procure more pre-decimal British pennies before this is all over...
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You know what it took to get it to play OK? Removing this one piece:
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It's going to need a new sheet of glass and I'll replace all of the 45 steel balls. Then a very deep cleaning.
Here is a shot of the glorious internals:
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I've always wanted a game LIKE this. I first was really into this British game Challenger (by Samson circa 1960), where you fill columns, and the winning coin goes to the operator, and the others fall out as a prize.
Same idea in Fill Em Up, but I like the skill element of Fill Em Up more. Challenger's gameplay is still just a basic coin drop, like some of the oldest and most basic trade stims. The Fill Em Up machine is a bit of a mechanical marvel, instead. But both have that column-filling action.
A video on Challenger, and you'll see the same column-filling. The only satisfying advantage of the challenger is that it's a much simpler machine, and so the payouts are automated.
But I think the Fill Em Up scratches that itch, and I won't have to consider importing a freaking CHALLENGER from the UK :)
the only other allwin I'm looking for right now is The Hat Trick, another Ruffler & Walker machine.
I've got one of these too! wondered if it'd ever show up on your blog... :)
ReplyDeletecool! What condition is yours in?
DeleteAny chance you have a The Hat Trick? ;)
WOW yours is way nicer than mine, the oranges on mine are all sun faded.
DeleteSuper cool you have a Pike's Peak! Also on my want list. Let me know if you'd ever sell it?
I've never seen a Make 21 before. Cool variation on a coin flick. Now go remove those stuck coins. ;)
Very cool. I restored a "Win A Crunch". Very similar to the "Win a Smarties" above. Very fun machines to work on and have around.
ReplyDeleteI have a Win A Spangles and it's pretty great for historical and novelty reasons, but I like the casual play value of a machine like this one. Every time I won on the other machine, I had to receive a treat! ;)
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