Bingo Pinballs
Created on 10-06-2019
I do not know if
this is an article or story or not, and it is a bit out of date – But I wanted
to post it anyway,
now that we are
starting to see these earlier Belgium Bingos showing up here in America – Aeneas
is sharing
some very good
advice here: “Don’t buy an older, less expensive machine – Unless you know it’s
working OK”
…and/or you have
or know someone who has the skill set to work on it`
…and if you buy an
old Belgium game, be very careful to not disconnect the backbox and cabinet`and
do not
let it sit with out power for extended time – Either scenario will likely
disable the RAM and kill the machine forever`
Bingo Machines
People are often confused about these machines and think they're pinball
machines too. Or they think all pinball machines are bingo machines.
Bingo machines are gambling machines !
Pinball is only for entertainment, you pay to play a game and have fun. Bingo
machines are totally different, you put money in them
(usually
more features are lit when you put more money in them) and the sole purpose of
the machine is to win credits/money with
the
game. Although it is not always legal to do so, usually the credits (and thus
money) earned by a player can be paid out by the
location
owner (who has a way to reset the credit counter back to zero).
As
you can see a bingo playfield is totally different from a pinball machine
playfield. There are no flippers or other active
components. Only holes in the playfield into
which a ball drops. The only interaction by the 'player' is to nudge the
machine
carefully
when the ball rolls down and hits one of the posts, in an attempt to get it
into the desired hole.
How
much you win and into what hole a player should try to let the ball drop,
depends on the type of machine. In its most
simple
way, the goal is to an amount of numbers (3 or more) in a row (horizontal,
vertical, diagonal). But every bingo machine
has
extra options to make it more challenging. Some award credits when you can
light all corners of the card, ..
Older
bingo machines usually only had 1 bingo card shown on the backbox. There were
however options to change the
position
of the numbers, or to change the connections (ie you did not have to make 3 in
a row but in another shape).
The
most popular bingo machines in Belgium (since the 1980ies) however are the
6-card type. These show six bingo cards
in
the backbox with fixed positions. However when a player enters more money into
the machine, more options are lit,
and
thus the chance to win will increase. However on some types of machines it's
not always known in advance
how
much extra money a player has to enter before a certain option will become lit.
You
cannot compare the worlds of pinball and bingo machines. Bingo machines involve
lots of money, operators
(certainly
here in Belgium) are the big guys.. pinball is peanuts and for most of them not
worth their time. To give you
an example about the money involved: in
Belgium (Flanders) an operator has to pay 3500 euro for each machine
just
to have permission to put it out on location for one year.. That's 10 times
more than the license to put a pinball
machine
on location. And still you see one or more bingo machines in almost every pub
(and they earn enough), while you
have
to search hard to find a pinball machine anywhere..
This
also has its implications for collectors who want to repair games. Pinball
manufacturers are open and provide a
lot
of schematics, collectors have made repair manuals available..
The
bingo world is very closed. As it's a gambling machine, everything is
restricted, eprom codes are not available at all, as
a
collector it's very hard to get support. Manuals and schematics are hardly
available, and people who know how to repair
these machines, prefer to keep this knowledge
for themselves.. If you ask around you can find information for some
older
machines (80ies and before).
Because
these machines are gambling machines, they are also heavily protected against
tampering.
I
had a Wimi Miss Bowling Turbo myself, it was not working. Most of the
information here is about this type of
bowling,
although different manufacturers probably use the same systems. Older bingos
may not have these
protections,
while modern bingos probably have more complicated security !
Anyway,
as far as I know, the Wimi Miss Bowling has a protection which most people have
a problem with. Part of the
security
code is kept in RAM. This means that if the battery dies, or, which happens
most, if you disconnect cables
(i.e.
you disconnect the head from the body to move the machine), the machine will
lose this memory and refuse to start.
If
you switch the machine now on, it's 'in code' and will only show specific
numbers on the display. Nothing else happens.
It
thinks it has been tampered with, and requires the operator to initialize the
machine. Without the correct tools, it
is
impossible to start this machine ever again !
I
did get hold of a manual which explains a bit about the security. However I've
never seen exactly how to restart
a
bingo, so what I write here is what other people told me, some things may be
wrong..
First,
I know you need a special small box with which you can disable the checks so
the bingo will start up. But.. I also
heard
that these bingos can be protected using an 'electronic key'.
This
actually is a keychain with an eprom on it, holding the 'missing' settings.
This key may even belong to the
machine
(so you probably can't use the key of another machine). If the bingo machine
has the electronic security key
activated,
you need this eprom keychain or you will never be able to start it ?!
Again,
I don't know how accurate all this information is. I have seen a (broken) eprom
keychain, so I know they exist.
I
haven't tested it.. it may be possible to start a bingo machine without the
keychain using only the box mentioned
above,
it may not.. I don't know, have to test it out.
If
you have a working bingo, take care of it and do not remove the head unless you
really have to (but don't complain
if
it won't work anymore). If you want to when you buy a bingo machine, be
careful. Non working machines can be bought
(sometimes)
cheap, but may be impossible to start. And that bargain you bought may not be a
bargain if you can't play it !
If
you really want to buy a bingo machine for your home, call around and get
information before you buy !
Prices
differ a lot between operators. Some don't want to sell, others will be glad
to. As the gaming law often changes,
some
operators may still have a lot of machines which they're not allowed to operate
anymore.
You'll
be much better off spending a bit more and buying a modern machine, which a dealer
knows how to repair,
than
trying to save $100 and get a 20 year old machine which no-one can repair
anymore.. I've heard of dealers selling
5 year old machines for as low as 250-600
euro, that's less than some people ask for a 20 year old broken machine !
One
remark about electro-mechanical bingo machines: these are very complicated and
even most people who repair
EM
pins don't want or know how to repair them. Buying a non-working EM bingo
machine to learn how to repair them, may
not
be a good idea, you'd better start learning to fix EM pinball machines first !
Even electro-mechanical bingo machines had a
'memory'
of how much money was put in them an paid out, and do various 'calculations' to
decide how many credits can be won
by a player or how many extra money has to be
inserted into the machine before a specific option becomes available.
Btw
for collectors interested in bingo flyers: If you want a belgian bingo flyer, I
have a few flyers of New GAA bingo machines.
I
trade these for any pinball flyer. General playfield parts are also still
available at operators so if you need anything special
you
may always contact me and I'll try to find if it's still available.
Update:
Some technical information about a Miss Bowling De Luxe:
Code EE51 is about the number of balls on the playfield, there need to be 10 in
the collector underneath the playfield.
In
combination with error code 21, this means the game thinks there are too many
balls in the game:
10
underneath the playfield and one in hole 21.
So probably this means the switch of hole 21 is broken/stuck closed and
therefore the game does not want to start.
~