Saturday, July 3, 2021

investigating Coin Craft Canada, Canada's pre-war pinball hopeful?

My mind raced when I first saw this post up on my local board.  Coin Craft Canada?  A CANADIAN MADE pinball machine from the pre-war days?  There were other Canadian companies that had dabbled, but this seemed like a serious contender.    

After a quick analysis, my hope was quickly dashed.  This wasn't exactly a Canadian made pinball, but what was it exactly?  In this post I want to dive into my research into Coin Craft Canada and the machine One Two Three.



Here's what we do know:  One-Two-Three aka "One Two Three" aka "1-2-3" was advertised for sale in late 1935 by Peo, a company out of New York that had been involved in trade stimulators, and had a few interesting forays into the pinball market.

We can follow this game over the span of 8 months of mentions in Billboard magazine:

1935-11-09: One-Two-Three is announced.  It should be noted that almost every industry quote like the above braggadocio is a fabrication.  It's all marketing, all the time.

1935-11-16: One-Two-Three is announced as the first of a new series of (I'm assuming) budget games that would come out every 2 weeks.  Very ambitious

1935-11-30: 1-2-3 is unveiled in print, and available for order!  $39.50

There are not other images of this machine online so this ad is great because it shows the 10 marbles in the lower bonus area, and says it is a 5-ball game.  It also shows us that (at one point at least) it had a back marquee designed/made for it.

1936-03-28: reconditioned One-Two-Three machines can be had for $10, just 4 months after release

1936-08-22: One, Two, Three is available for $4.90 just 10 months later.  Down from $39.50

But here we have a One Two Three that has this wonderful little sticker on it, claiming "Made by Coin Craft Canada"


Peo branded shooter

We can see this is the same shooter/lifter plate as used in Peo's Pigskin from 1934:



coin mech listed as 1933 patent

First I want to talk about the game a bit.


The game entirely takes place in the top half of the playfield, and main feature seems to be the bottom animation.
Ball falls in the THREE hole, three balls are sent in the lower bonus area. TWO fires it twice. ONE, the center and side ONEs, each fire the lower bonus once.
Balls that enter these holes would then roll down and could be played again, allowing a player to readily max out their lower bonus.

The center triangle most likely housed a small light bulb.
I assume this is a lamp socket



Having a lower bonus area is something that came up a few times in 1935, and can be seen in Peo's 1935 Travel Around The World though that game does the far more popular gimmick of shooting the ball-in-play into the higher-scoring bonus field.

Travel Round The World from 1935


There are a number of nails missing in this playfield. I count 8? Not unheard of for that kind of modification to be done with prototypes, but I doubt an operator would remove 8 nails.  Maybe this was being experimented with in Canada?  All speculation.
It certainly had some play with them in as you can see the "wear halo" around one of the nail holes on the right side showing how the ball's radius wouldn't have have rolled in close to the nail area.

wear halo visible

The One-Two-Three table here is using half the playfield to just count bonus points, so not very efficient. A similar bonus idea was done by Peo in the 1935 game (sequel to Pigskin) All American Football.  The balls are just bonus counters after all, so it's odd Peo chose to essentially do the same thing with half of the playfield. This Peo backbox bonus count was still popular 40+ years later with a handful of games like Top Score and Super Soccer.


A big thing that stands out for me here is the side art on the cabinet

Can you spot what is odd here?

I'll give you a clue, here is a sampling of some of the prettiest cabinets from 1936
Bumper

Credit

Ginger

Harvest Moon

Pockets

Preakness

Top Hat

That's right, there's no typography.  No lettering.  In fact, just browsing IPDB pictures I don't see much in the way of a game's name appearing on the side up for a while, and I browsed up until 1942.

So that perhaps tells us that this was perhaps a prototype copy or a "saleman's sample" copy to try and drum up business.  The ad copy for 1-2-3 doesn't show any side art, but also photos in ads don't always represent the final product.


While it's kind of suspicious that the 1935 article on 1-2-3 mentioned it was "mechanically perfect", we can tell this one certainly was not.


The bonus mech has an added flag spring, which you can see has scraped the playfield a bunch.  An inherent design flaw here is that if a ball is kicked up to the right, if it doesn't make it into the bonus channel properly it will fall back down to the kicker.  Another ball will be in the kicker lane, making the next shot probably impossible.  

I'm not really sure what problem the flag spring could possibly be solving here, to be honest.  I would think a one-way gate above the 10,000 score would be useful, but if a ball didn't make it up there we'd be left with the same issue.


Let's move on to Coin Craft Canada and see what we can learn.

Coin Craft Canada appears to have existed from around 1935 to 1948, which is actually far longer than most coinop companies of that era.

1935: Coin Craft Canada does not exist in the 1935 directory

1936: Coin Craft Canada first appears in the 1936 Vernon's Hamilton City Directory 

E. Lieberman, mgr.  mfrs coin controlled equip, 26 Gore

Liebman, Eric is listed under people, saying he lives in Crystal Beach 

1937 entry adds phone numbers:

COIN CRAFT CANADA

(Eric Liebman), Gordon M Noble Local Mgr;

Canadian Manufacturers and Distributors of Coin Controlled Equipment, 26 Gore, Phone Baker, 7667, After Hours Phone Regent 0632

In the 1939 entry they have moved to a new address: 

Coin Craft Canada (Eric Liebman),

Canadian Manufacturers and Distributors of Coin Controlled Equipment, 441 Aberdeen av, Phone2-7667, After Hours Phone 2-9093

They are absent from the 1949 version.

Going by streets,
1935 lists them at 26 Gore, Griffin bldg.  Gore no longer exists in Hamilton, but the 1935 directory tells us that Gore's North side went from 98 James N, east to Mary.  That puts Gore here: https://goo.gl/maps/cDtGbps599HjDavV8
Gore is now called Wilson, by my guess.  It'll come as no shock that the Griffin Building now appears to be a parking lot.
441 Aberdeen Av is a single family home.

We can also trace their history through magazine appearances.


Coin Craft Canada had a classified ad in Billboard 1935-10-26:
"CANADIAN OPERATORS - 150 PINS AND Slots, The largest clearing house in Canada."
with the Gore st address

1935-11-2 Billboard the advert has changed to 
"CANADA OPERATORS - ABOUT 110 GOOD Used Pin Games.  Must make room for our production of two new numbers.  First come, first served."
so they sold about 40 of their stock in a week?  And seem to be announcing that they're producing their own stuff and not just selling stock

This ad coincides with the announcement of Peo's 1-2-3.  Could CCC be working to produce their own  "Canadian made" versions of 1-2-3 for the Canadian market?


1938-02-19 Billboard magazine Eric makes an appearance:

"CANADIAN OPERATORS - NO CLOSED TERRI-tories for our Free Game Units.  We deliver any game this style.  Buying all '38 and late '37 equipment"

perhaps "Free Game Units" is an innovation for awarding free games automatically, and they're modifying games with it?


1942, founder Eric Liebman ran into legal trouble in Ontario:




Eric Liebman suggests inventing the Internet Pinball Database is a GOOD IDEA


"CASH WAITING FOR
WALLBOXES - Dime or nickjel play 16-20-24 Selections any make, multi wire.
FLEETWOODS - Must be perfect every way!
FOUR ROSES  ditto."

same ad appears in 1946-02-18, 1946-02-25, 1946-03-04, 1946-03-11, 1946-03-18

"WANT-  Several Sets of Parts complete to change over Panoramas into Solo Vues.  Also want Rotary Merchandisers, Free Play Slots and Tables.  No Junk Please"
same Aberdeen address given

THIS INTERESTS ME:
"FOR SALE - Canadian Operators! Get those high-power money makers from us.  Victory Special; Long Acre; Pimlico; 41 Derby; Club Trophy; Dead Heat; Sport Special; Record Time; Dark Horse; etc.  Landed Canadian prices. 60 or 25 cycle operation.  We are one ball specialists."

"FOR SALE - Canadian Operators! We are somewhat overstocked and are selling for some time at U.S. prices with no advance duty, sales tax and excise.  Save these items by wiring us your requirements.  Everything in 1-balland 5-ball tables right now. "


You might be wondering about the "60 or 25 cycle" operation, and I had to be told about it too.
This all relates to the power generation of Niagara Falls.
Because the Niagara project was so influential on electric power systems design, 25 Hz prevailed as the North American standard for low-frequency AC.

A friend of mine elaborated:
Yeah, they were still converting it to 60Hz in the 1950s. It's not unusual that I come across a conversion sticker on an older service.

It was incredibly expensive as a project because the hydroelectric companies were also responsible for retrofitting any consumer equipment to make it compatible. That wasn't terribly difficult, though. Swap out one motor for another. People didn't have as many appliances in their home back then.

If you run a coil (transformer, motor, solenoid) that was designed to operate on 25Hz on 60Hz, it will often appear as being "tired" - they present more than double the impedance at the higher frequency, and so less current flows. They may turn slower and be much less torquey. They won't be damaged, but they will appear to work poorly. Anything of that age that relies on inductance must be modified. Anything resistive, such as a heating element or incandescent lamp, will operate without difficulty. It's expecting an RMS voltage of approximately 115V, and that hasn't changed much in the last century. Resistive objects don't change impedance with shifting frequency, but inductive and capacitive objects do.

It's interesting to note that electricity itself and what we use it for hasn't changed since we first learned to harvest it: since the beginning, we have used it to make heat, make light, make objects move, and to signal. More than a century later, we still only use electricity to make heat, make light, make objects move, and to signal. The underlying technologies have transformed as rapidly as our civilization has, but the fundamental goals of electrification haven't.

onwards!

they're selling "wall boxes" which I assume are jukebox interfaces that would sit at your table.

1947-02-10 Cash Box: beginning of the end?
"FOR SALE -  CANADIAN OPERATORS: FIVE ROUTES FOR SALE in Ontario's most heavily populated district.  Established for up to 15 years.  Priced from $3000 to $20,000.  All free play equipment and music, most of it licensed.  Sold on guaranteed income basis, licensed 1 year ahead."
This is interesting because it implies they've been running routes since 1932 or so.

"NOTICE - All Operators in 25 cycle 110 V. -A.C. Territory!  Canadian Operators!  Satisfactory performance on 25 cycle can not be achieved by merely changing power packs and motors of originally 60 cycle equipment; other factors have to be taken into consideration.  We are specialists of 15 years experience in this line.  Consult us."

"FOR SALE - Canadian Operators!  Twelve year old route in Eastern city with splendid returns and all legal equipment for sale.  Contract Music and Free Plays only.  Unusual amount of good will and splendid staff with it.  $10,000 will handle."

1947-05-05 Cash box: same ad as above.

"WANT - For export.  Delivery within thirty days.  Used Dynamites, Tornados, Stage Door, Canteens, Surf Queens, Four Aces, Arcade equipment of all kinds" etc

in the same issue:
"FOR SALE - Canadian Operators!  C C C ceases to operate as of May 15th.  Everything is being sold at any price it brings.  Hundreds of slots, one balls and five ball games for 60 and 25 cycle operation.  PHonos, Hideaways, Wall Boxes, Payout and Free Play equipment.  Do not miss this!"

also
"FOR SALE - Canadian Operators!  $12,000 worth of parts and supplies used in the operation of music, payout and free play equipment for sale.  This is the wind-up of one of the oldest and largest operating enterprises in the Dominion.  Also considerable equipment on hand yet.  Panorams at a bargain!"

FOR SALE - Manufacturers, distributors, Operators - Attention!  Coin machine Plant for Sale and Territory vacant.  Coin Craft Canada, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada ceased operating some time ago, is now ready to withdraw from business completely.  Model Plant $20,000 Surplus Stock $10,000.  This is a Snap.

1948-10-23 Coin Box is the end of the trail 


This would put the founding date of Coin Craft Canada at 1928 which is highly suspect LOL
This cites the WW2 ban on importation, and gives us a perfect segue into North Star storytelling territory!  :)

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