Tin Pan Alley pusher
Re: Tin Pan Alley
Does anyone have a gameplay video of this machine, or one with a similar mechanism? Curious as to the operation.
- coppinpr
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Re: Tin Pan Alley
I don't know of any videos of this or the well known "Cake walk" which, as Jerry says, most likely had the same action. Both machines have thin, coin-sized gaps running from front to back. These slots moved backwards and forwards (when one was to the front the one next to it was to the back, hence "cake walk"). The coins fell to the back of the playfield when played, where they fell into one of the gaps (or a losing gap). The backward/forward movement of the slots slowly moved the coins forward and eventually winners fell off the front as a payout. At least that's how I remember them. Might have missed something A compulsive money grabber of a machine, but not one that looks impressive from the spectator view point which is, perhaps, why there are no videos.
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Re: Tin Pan Alley
I remember vividly playing the exact machine that coppinpr has kindly posted an image of. Specifically it was in the Harrison's chain of arcades on Bognor Regis seafront next to Jones Garage. It was a dull machine to play as you could only really win 2 coins at a time. This being reliant on (as they say in the TV show "tipping point") a rider stacking two coins in a column. However, one could wait for maybe a few double coins to get to the edge but profit to the player was very poor. Often as not you would receive one coin back. When the regular Cromptons pusher came along with one single playfield you could easily win more than 10 coins with one push and clear up because control of the coin position landing on upper playfield was relatively easy. Tightly held in playslot with pressure and spinning to right would make coin go left, and vice versa to left. My first motorbike costing 145 pound in 1982 was paid for by waiting and playing stacked 2p coin pushers in my misspent youth.
- jimmy55
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Re: Tin Pan Alley
The worst thing they ever did with pushers was the automatic 'gate' that activates after a period of inactivity and stops the 'stray' 2ps falling out. My kids loved hunting the arcades for the 'freebies'.
- flippa_winna
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Re: Tin Pan Alley pusher
Well blow me down... as some of you here may well be aware I am STILL in the process of writing a book about coin pushers. I have been doing research for over 10 years and I never knew of this machine's existence until now.
The cabinet is identical to that of the single player pusher 'Copper Canyon', so helps with dating it. I would date it to the very early seventies, probably quite soon after complete decimalisation took place.
Does anyone happen to know the seller or new buyer because I would very much like to include a photograph in my book and would be happy to credit their name with the photo?
Re: Tin Pan Alley pusher
Not from the operator's point of view, stopped all those gaining anything from banging the sides and tipping them.
Re: Tin Pan Alley
Ted Harrison also owned Clacton Pier and he had about eight of these Crompton Cakewalk pushers in the arcade up to 2009. He sold the pier that year and I can’t remember if it was shortly before or after the sale that all of them were scrapped. It was so sad seeing them left outside at the end of the season and then skipped.
Ted told me that he bought an arcade in early 2000 that had been abandoned for many years. I seem to recall he said it was in Cornwall. It was full of vintage machines. He said that he dumped them and told me that to him it was all about business and getting the arcade re-fitted and making money as quickly as possible. Ted passed away in 2017. I wish I’d invested more time in recording his story. Did anyone here know him?
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