Unusual 1920s Mills machine

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brigham
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by brigham »

20-stop numbers on a 10-stop mech.
I'm guessing it's on a British coin?
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treefrog
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by treefrog »

Is there a jackpot mechanism inside? This may help origin, as the Mills type of this period would be part of the front casting. Given you have a bolted on front, maybe a Firmans jackpot in there. !PUZZLED!
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watlingman
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by watlingman »

Hi, it would be interesting to see if there's any jackpot mechanism behind the window! I suspect not, and originally probably just had a few coins showing in the window. Anyway, the good news is it looks all there and will polish up to be a nice machine. All the springs and things are still available. There's more than enough help on here if you get stuck - just depends what your trying to achieve.
Good luck.
harry_p
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by harry_p »

I now have the machine home, ( a surprisingly heavy thing! ) and have had a few minutes to play around with it.

Watched a couple of videos found on here which showed how easy it was to get the mechanism out, removed it and removed several jammed coins. Gave it a light oiling in a few places which looked a bit corroded / sticky and it now cranks, spins, whirrs and clicks nicely.

There's definitely some sort of jackpot collection bin behind the window with a weighted arm, which emptys into the coin tray. Not entirely sure how that section of the machine works, as there were lots of coins stuck in the bottom pieces which I think is where it needs some mechanical attention.


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It has definitely had a busy life at some point as a lot of the screw heads around the coin slot are very well worn.
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coppinpr
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by coppinpr »

a surprisingly heavy thing!
you just confirmed your new to the hobby :lol:
Well it gets more interesting as we go along, That has to be one of the simplest jackpots ever and was most likley the product of the British refurbisher . The jackpot door simply seems to be held in place by the top slide,when the slide moves back on a win the door opens...simples. I guess the weight on the JP arm resets the door once the coins have dropped and reduced the weight on the arm,all coins seem to go to the jack pot once the coin tube is full then when it overflows they go to the coin box,I bet it was prone to jamming.Some part seems to have been removed from just above the jackpot arm. As mentioned earlier this machine has 10 stops and 20 symbols,do you understand what this means? Being new to the game perhaps not, Unless it is an unusual mech (we cant quite be sure from the photo) 10 of the symbols never come up as the machine can only stop in 10 preset places
harry_p
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by harry_p »

Yes, 100% novice! The limit of my knowledge is a few hours casual browsing around this forum over the last month or so.

As said in my first post, I'm quite mechanically minded / good with my hands and spend most of my spare time pulling cars and computers to bits. Never delved into anything this old before.

I gather most of these machines were 10 stop but it was quite common for uk machines to get 20 stop stickers to make it look like you were more likely to win?

I haven't entirely figured out the jackpot, it is counterbalanced with a little weight on the end of the arm, but not quite sure how the slides work yet also don't know whether there's anything missing which it needs to work properly. As you say, there are holes and a ghost mark from a bracket or something on the inside of the casing above the jackpot arm, but there's no sign of any spare parts inside which might have worked loose and fallen off.
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brigham
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by brigham »

The famous Mills fruit symbols were 20 to the reel even before 20-stop mechs were even thought of.
Mills opened-out the reel window so as to expose three symbols on each reel, rather than just the ones on the payout line. It gave extra excitement, because it produced the 'just-one-off' factor.
It was the biggest boost in 'playability' until Tic Tac Toe came out.
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coppinpr
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by coppinpr »

The first thing to do is get the mech working, which from the sound of it won't take much IF everything is there. It most likely is. Remove the coin tube, the slide cover and the slides and clean them well, do not oil them in any way, check the springs on the slides. They have to be good but not particularly strong. Replace the slides in the correct order and cycle the mech outside the case and see what happens. Rreport back if it fails and at what point and we can help sort it.
:cool:
harry_p
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by harry_p »

I did suspect the slides were supposed to run dry, I have just used some penetrating oil just to free them up initially and see what is going on before I strip it for a proper clean.

Just wondering is there's a tool or certain method I can use to work the mechanism outside the case a bit more easily as it needs quite a lot of pressure to do it without the lever.
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special when lit
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by special when lit »

I made this out of an old pinball machine playfield support, but a big screwdriver works just as well.
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watlingman
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by watlingman »

I have some early Mills machines but only one has that top casting with the two extra bars on the reel window!
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brigham
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by brigham »

That looks to be a Mills Poinsettia, but with a double jackpot conversion.
Pace, perhaps?
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watlingman
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by watlingman »

Yes mills revamp using pace parts
santelmann
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Re: Unusual 1920s Mills machine

Post by santelmann »

The "two casting bars" are a separate frame which could be used on Liberty Bell type top castings. It's marked with "MLB 1773".
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