Clown slot machine clown slot machine.

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The only comment I can say so far is that if you look at the photo at the top of your car, you will probably find that there are probably two holes that are actually made at once and are now sealed.

I am not an expert in this machine, but I have one and the date is almost correct. In fact, I believe Penny Menes understands a lot about it, I don't take into account where he is in real time, he's for another busy week. There is a high possibility that you will jump to.

Pennymachines's site administrator Posted on: Wednesday, November 06, 2002 12:12 Posted on: November 06, 2002 (Wednesday)

Re: Bajazzo Clown

Message by Pennymachines "Sunday, September 07, 2008 16:37

Fredslilja wrote: There was no lock when I bought the rock car. Now, I bought a lock that fits perfectly for the cut hole behind the door. I was impressed by the hole for the rock cylinder in the door. Similarly, more holes have been made in the past. If you make more holes, you don't know why the cut holes are gone.

Locks are often replaced. Whether the spring is gone, the lock is no longer moving, or is someone pushing?

Occasionally, it is literally exchanged for the same size / brand lock. There are hundreds of different types. The barrel has a compatible ability, but the lock body is different, and it actually comes out with fleas!

Report from Fredslilja: I saw another car on ebay (see photo), but there is a ring around the cylinder hole. This was a general thing that showed the hole. Looking closely at my cylinder hole, there was a trace of such a ring, and there were two screws. Anyone can determine this as mine?

See below for unique clown locks with round plates around the cylinder. It seems that you were similar to this at first.

Clown tablet. JPG (19. 57 KIB) Views 3957 1

FREDSLILJA's report: Top flasher There are two holes for top flash when you look at my car top look. On ebay, there was only one model with top flash (see photos). Is this a unique top flash, or was it manufactured later?

Yes, I even think that the small German crown was all at the top flash at first. Most of them were removed, discarded, or lost at one point (to make it easier to get off the car for transportation).

Fredslilja's comment: Number in wood

L. M. O 103 SAMC660 Can anyone understand what this actually means?

I hope L. M. O. 103 is a clown model number 103B. If you enter Samc660 on Google, you will return straight to this wonderful site! If anyone can answer, it's probably a German collector, but I think this is the original serial number of your car. A long time ago, a telephone exchange said that when he bought a used clown, he picked it up to think. He also fumbled by the serial number engraved just below the side of the housing and just below the cover. When he was nearby, he found that he was buying a hig h-quality German device, not a lo w-quality British copy.

I liked the situation, but later came across a British clown with a number on the side. British manufacturers may have become wise.

FREDSLILJA's report: The character on the coin accessor and explanatory card "Clown NO 103b Licensed Under Patent 23 431/1900" I don't remember how to read this information ?

I think the clown number 103B is certainly improved compared to the clown 103. I think the clown 103B has been manufactured longer, and as a result it has been discovered more. Patent 23431/1900 was filed in 1900 by Henry John Gerard Pessers. In other words, this is a genuine Pickwick patent, but it is Germans who came up with clowns. Apart from that, there is no doubt that this patent has contributed to the association of cars that have already been recognized as a "skill game" by the court.

Fredslilja's report: The card was stuck on a small piece of paper with "coin". Did this machine work on a specific token?

That's right. It should be said that the coins are put in the slot, "but your clown probably worked in a room that exchanged coins with checks and tokens.

Fredslilja's report: The machine was manufactured from 1912 to 1913. Is this the right information?

This is the date of the first witness, but it has been there for many years. I don't know when the 103B was discovered, but it was made in Germany until the Nazis banned all slot machines.

Fredslilja Posted: 74 Posted: July 15, 2008 10:43 Comments: 0 Location: Sweden

Re: Bajazzo Clown

Fredslilja's message "Friday, September 07, 2008 19:55

Thank you very much, Penny Menes. Great information

I'm a little wondering where this machine came from. The annotation card was "France". It can be used on an elderly penny machine. And he told me that this machine was actually made in Germany.

When I got it, the dealer basically wrote that until the First World War the cars were made of reddish velvet, and in the subsequent wars greenish velvet was used. Is it possible that this is reliable information? Or was it written just for this purpose, to arrange the situation for him more interesting?

As you can see from the photo below, the iron of the coin rope is in pretty bad condition. In fact, the dealer wrote that until the Ten Thousand Years War it was not easy to remove good quality metal for the arms industry. Is it a fiction that has the potential to be so? I don't take it into account. It has a certain possibility, I need to find more high quality copies and change it?

Investment

Pennymachines's site administrator Posted on: Wednesday, November 06, 2002 12:12 Posted on: November 06, 2002 (Wednesday)

Re: Bajazzo Clown

PennyMachines News "Sun Sep 07, 2008 10:23 PM

The Peche is often featured with a clown, because it was exported to Germany, France, Great Britain and the USA. In your copy, the exporter does not look like a normal Germanic, but more French. Destructible Mazak (monkey metal) slot for coins, absolutely, France. Mazak is used on many French machines, for example in the mechanism and exterior. British and German machines did not use it - at least, before the rise of the German hanging machines, two world wars afterwards. The fact that the connector on the French coin does not really justify the machine gun. If it was operated in France, there would have been 2 for the screws on the front panel where the license plate is attached. You need to find one hole (see Pierrot below). It is likely manufactured in France, but it may have been manufactured in Germany for the French market, then exported to England and annotated in England.

I have never heard of the concept of red and green velvet. I would never suspect a German Pierrot, who would never have a greenish plush toy.

The photo below - "Arkady" Jean-Claude Baudot. The carved ridges, the lock for the coins, the unusual castle frame - all these are clearly French, but they are in fact German-made, which explains why. Some French Pierrots are absolutely recognizable when you see the decorative fittings and the fruitwood building.

Look at the Pierrot I arranged in this topic. It uses the same espadrilles and pays attention to the circular shape of the castle. The lock for the coins definitely does not close the hole in the case - I assume she changed the broken lock for a Mazac. The French leadership was written and I recorded it as French, but who knows?

Investment JC Posted by: 1095 To: 2006 February 19 (Sun) 22:38 Number of comments: 10 Location: Kent Contact

Re: RULE BRITANNIA.

Posted by: JC "2008 September 08 (Mon) 12:14

You are being disrespectful to us, Penny Machines! I truly hope we never argue over slot machines (or anything else), but when you say "high German technology, not low British technology" where does this misconception come from that German technology in the early 20th century was better than any other technology? After all, we came up with the technology! But until the 1950s they showed almost no innovation or real ingenuity, and I really don't think they made or designed their slot machines any differently than we do. (Actually, if you want to see truly outstanding engineering and design, go to France (that's another story). Look at the photo below. There's no way the Germans would have had the reason or imagination to invent something similar (photos don't do it justice). This is an unimaginably perfectly designed and manufactured device (I'm looking at it right now)! (By the way, who won the war?) Let's dismiss any talk of the Germans having the advantage as a rudimentary lie.

As for the color of the velvet, I've heard it myself, but I think Frederick got it wrong. As far as I know (as history goes), the machines made up until World War I were coffee velvet, the few made during the war were scarlet, and all the ones made after the war were greenish velvet. This is probably because there are a relatively large number of machines restored in the past 30 years that are not usable, but it should be easy to determine whether the velvet on a machine is considered abnormal.

Investment Arrgee - Message: 1615 Joined: 2007-02-08 11:56 Comments: 17 Location: North Wiltshire

Re: Bajazzo Clown

News from Arrgee "Doing" 11 Sep 2008 2:02 pm

Interesting content, well done Penny Machines.

My clown contains a patent, but there is another "clown" No 8303 b (see photo below). My token device for payment is Frederick's "clown", it produces tokens for the back wall, which roll down in a prominent slide and go into the exit bin, while the release-device is attached to the legs of a prominent mound for payment, as a result of these tokens are present on the monitor for everyone to see.

I am deformed by the number and the number of tailor resilts that know that this actual reflective function was more than later in the wound version (that is, the token is not displayed like my clown). If it is displayed in, my number 8303 B will be displayed. Is there any approval of this?

In my clown, P. M. W. G. XX, for example, it was actually executed (imported? As you can see, the brown back is characteristic, and then the funds are unique. P. M. W. G. It is usually closed during World War I, but no one knows if the back color and date have any meaning.

If I was manufactured by PMWG, I would prove Jerry's typical British engineering. < SPAN> I have a number and a number and suffix that I know that this actual reflective function was more than a later wound version (ie, like my clown, no token). If it is displayed in the model deformation, my number 8303 B will be displayed. Is there any approval of this?

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Elim Rim - Journalist, creative writer

Last modified 21.04.2025

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