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in2pin

Member
Dec 11, 2014
55
7
8
Georgetown, ON
Interested to buy a EM machine for early to mid 70's. Know nothing, so hoping to learn from the people on this site. Any suggestion/advice/recommendations/ etc. Is welcome and appreciated.

Dave
 

in2pin

Member
Dec 11, 2014
55
7
8
Georgetown, ON
Welcome, now I'm not the new guy :) Look around, you'll find a lot of great information.
I've been reading a few of your posts. I'm starting to wonder if pinball ownership is a good idea for me? I want to play it, not be fixing it! I'm not a handyman so owning a pinball might get expensive?
What machines do you have coming?

Dave
 

WARLOCK

Administrator
Staff member
Nov 14, 2012
1,823
205
73
53
The Bluffs, Scarborough
Dave,

PM (Private message) CJBob (Bob) and chat there.
He will likely tell you what he is up to, but not likely "online" before his machines arrive in his house.

You DEFINATELY DO NOT WANT PROJECT MACHINES as the first machine or two that you own.
Do not worry about pinball ownership, we have many great restorers and repair guys here who offer advice online.

Lookup the "Menace Files" here. If we can't help you fix it, Menace (Doug) can.
Sylvain, Grauwulf, Cooke, Drano and so many others here "know their stuff" and help us all out.

Keep reading.

Scott
 
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in2pin

Member
Dec 11, 2014
55
7
8
Georgetown, ON
Dave,

PM (Private message) CJBob (Bob) and chat there.
He will likely tell you what he is up to, but not likely "online" before his machines arrive in his house.

You DEFINATELY DO NOT WANT PROJECT MACHINES as the first machine or two that you own.
Do not worry about pinball ownership, we have many great restorers and repair guys here who offer advice online.

Lookup the "Menace Files" here. If we can't help you fix it, Menace (Doug) can.
Sylvain, Grauwulf, Cooke, Drano and so many others here "know their stuff" and help us all out.

Keep reading.

Scott
Scott,

No intentions of buying a project. Want a very nice looking and 100% working machine that I can plug in and play.

Dave
 

bstock

Active Member
Apr 1, 2013
325
48
28
Montreal, Quebec
I've been reading a few of your posts. I'm starting to wonder if pinball ownership is a good idea for me? I want to play it, not be fixing it! I'm not a handyman so owning a pinball might get expensive?
What machines do you have coming?

Dave
Welcome Dave. Maintenance and repair are definitely part of this hobby. They do break and they do need maintenance. If you're not willing to do ANY work, you'll want to meet the right people and have some money to offer them for their services.

Think of it like a car. If your headlight bulb burns out, you can buy a new bulb for $30 and replace it yourself in 20 minutes even if you've never done it before. But if you take it to the shop it will probably cost you a lot more... Same applies in this hobby.

That being said, a lot of the regular maintenance and little repairs are nothing to be afraid of if you're willing to learn. As warlock mentioned, advice and guidance is free and readily available here.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

CJBob

Active Member
Nov 24, 2014
354
91
28
Mississauga
I've been reading a few of your posts. I'm starting to wonder if pinball ownership is a good idea for me? I want to play it, not be fixing it! I'm not a handyman so owning a pinball might get expensive?
What machines do you have coming?

Dave

Hi Dave, I have a Bobby Orr Powerplay and an Eight Ball coming soon, both Bally SS. I dug around this site and others for several weeks to check out sources because I definitely wanted to buy from reputable sellers who will deliver since I'm not sure what to look for. I wasn't going to be comfortable getting a deal on kijiji and then wondering what to do next.

The thread on what tools to have on hand is as intimidating to me as I assume it is to you. I'm not handy myself. I'm excited to get into this but I'll be starting small with spare bulbs, fuses, a volt meter and novus cleaner. If I need to remove a cap to replace a bulb I want to be able to do that, if the bulb is under the play board I'd like to be able to do that myself. If a drop target is stuck I'll do some research to see if I can fix it. Over time as I get more comfortable likely I can do more, maybe not.

I'm actually more comfortable now knowing I can come here for good advice, I can search youtube and google to see exactly what to do and just as importantly what not to do.

I think it will be like the IKEA effect. If I can fix a few minor things I'm going to love my machines even more.

Maybe it's like getting married. If you knew it was going to be a lot of work you might not do it, best to just dive right in and enjoy the ride!
 
Last edited:

DRANO

Super Member
Nov 15, 2012
2,821
517
113
Mississauga
Welcome Dave!

If Bob's Bally Eight Ball becomes available I would seriously consider that for a first game.
It's the first solid state pin, if I'm not mistaken, that wasn't originally designed as an electro-mechanical game.
I think it is a lot of fun. Playfield is simple and the objectives are not complicated, but it has a great feel and can be very fast. I just picked up a nice example myself.

Otherwise, if you are set on 70's titles, you will most likely be looking at EMs, as others have said already.
If this is the case, I would recommend the mid-to late 70's Gottliebs (the ones with standard sized 3" flippers) and, if you can find a good one, try to stick to single player games. These are the ones with the angular heads (wedgeheads).
EM games don't have logic like the ss ones, so single player games have progression from ball to ball. Meaning, if you kncked down 3 out of 5 drop targets on ball one, they will still remain down on ball 2. Once you get into multi-player EMs, the machines are not able to track each player's progress individually anymore, so you end up starting from scratch on each new ball and everything re-sets. It's not as much fun IMO.

Good luck with your hunt. There's always a decent deal on an EM out there smewhere.
 

REVOLUTION

Administrator
Staff member
Nov 13, 2012
2,314
76
48
46
GTA
www.pinballrevolution.com
Welcome, Dave! Don't be too intimidated by the hobby.. my first game was a $300 Stern Magic and since then I've gone through 50+ games. I'm not gonna lie, any game you buy WILL break down eventually... just like a car, these things are full of working parts. That being said, tinkering and learning new things is what it's all about. Playing the game is just the reward ;)

You've come to the right place. You're surrounded by amazing people to guide you. :)
 

brad808

Member
Feb 28, 2013
656
24
18
Brantford
Best advice is to not buy one. Honestly. Pinball machines are a lot of maintenance. Sounds like you are better off playing other people's games.