The Super Treble Chance was Bally model 735, 1963, and the Mazooma Bell was model 753, 1964. In between these two was model 741, the 1963 Money Honey. Part of Bally's preparation for the Money Honey was lobbying the Illinois legislature to legalize the manufacture of gambling devices, which passed in (I think) 1962, so these were some of the earliest payout Ballys. At that time, Bally had no market for payout machines in the USA, so the payout flashers were all intended for export. Here's an interesting picture of the innards of the model 753 Mazooma Bell. On the back door, top center, is a reflex unit. Top left, mounted vertically, is a modified mixer unit straight out of a Bingo pinball with four disks, three for the reel flashers and the fourth probably for the odds unit. Each of them is stopped by a steel starwheel with 50 teeth, so this game had LOTS of stop combinations. At bottom left there's a Bingo control unit, with the drag arm intermittent motion mechanism just under the motor for randomizing. It has the standard Bingo three groups of cam switches on the shaft, each with its own clutch to allow it to turn independently. One probably runs the game process, one runs the odds gamble and the third runs the payout counter. There's another disk at the bottom left, also with a 50 tooth stop disk. This would be the search disk on a Bingo, but this one is not wired the same way - it looks like simple arcs of common contacts. I don't know what it does. Bottom, either side of the transformer, are two step-up units. The one on the right is the score counter. The one on the left puzzles me because it doesn't have a reset coil, so it goes round continuously. I can't read the label so I can only guess it's the token counter. These machines paid out a maximum of 100 to the replay counter, so for the 200 coin jackpot you got 100 on the counter and one token, for the 500 jackpot four tokens. If you doubled up, you got 100 counts plus 3 or 9 tokens, for triple 100 plus 5 or 14 tokens, and for 4X, 100 plus 7 or 19 tokens. The tokens were paid out one at a time as the count approached 100. The counter has six wires coming off it plus one for the wiper, so if it's the token multiplier for tokens that's the right number. Why it has no reset coil, I can't say. It must always make the same number of steps and end up at the same place. It sure would be nice to see a clearer photo of this mechanism where I could read the labels, if anyone has one. Sorry, I've taken this thread a bit off the topic of the PS stabilizer. I should really have started a new thread. Damn, I love these old EMs.
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