CAMELOT

Camelot
Bally
1970

Camelot by Bally was designed in October 1969 and manufactured in February 1970. It was the second Bally four-player featuring the new 3 Inch ‘king size’ flippers. Also, it was one of just two Bally four-players combining 4-digit scoring with the new large flippers. The two-player version with identical playfield and cabinet artwork (in different colors however) is Galahad, manufactured in January 1970. Like all Bally machines with the lift-up frame cabinet, it needs slightly shorter 71 cm, black painted legs.

theme | Medieval, knights

design | Ted Zale
art | Christian Marche

EM
4 player game
1.865 units produced
acquisitie | ca. 2018

BALLY HOO

Bally Hoo
Bally
1969

Bally Hoo was designed in March 1969 and produced in October 1969. It was the first Bally with 3-inch flippers (in this case in red), described as jumbo-flippers and one out of two Bally four-players combining 4-digit scoring with long flippers. Like most of Bally’s four-players from 1964 to 1972, it was also available in German language. The machine pictured on the US-flyer has chrome legs, but the serial-run had black legs (71cm) as usual since mid-1967 (when the new cabinet with lift-up frame was introduced).

theme | circus

design | Ted Zale
art | Christian Marche

EM
4 player game
2.115 units produced
acquisitie | juli 2023

HI-DEAL

Hi-Deal
Bally
1975


Hi-Deal is a pinball machine from October 1975, manufactured by Bally Manufacturing Co.

theme | playing cards

design | Jim Patla
art | Dick White

EM
1 player game
2.085 units produced
acquisitie | november 2024

MARINER

Mariner
Bally
1971

In September 1971, the game had been launched as 2-player game with slightly different graphics and a more greenish color scheme under the name of Sea Ray. Conversion to something similar like an Add-A-Ball is possible by adjusting the jumpers to provide free balls rather than free games. Games shipped to Germany and other European countries typically came with no bells and three coin chutes.

theme | spear fishing

design | Ted Zale
art | Christian Marche

EM
4 player game
2.000 units produced
acquisitie | 2018

STAR TREK

Star Trek
Bally
1979

Star Trek is a pinball machine from April 1979, manufactured by Bally Manufacturing Co. A total of 16,842 units were built. It was the first officially licensed Star Trek pinball game which extended into many other machines later on. There were three significant versions of the backglass. It’s not known how many of each was produced on production machines. The earliest version had had the colorful TV series uniforms and a small character in the lower-left shooting a humanoid. The next version of the backglass removed the humanoid for a ball of energy but still had the color uniforms from the original Star Trek TV series. The final version was changed (along with two playfield plastics) early in the production to show them dressed in gray single-color clothing to fit with the Star Trek Hollywood movie that was coming out at the same time as the game. Sound was accomplished with the AS-2518-32 sound board. This is the first generation of electronic sound boards from Bally. It mimicked the sounds of the EMs in that most of the sounds were based around the 10, 100, and 1000 point chimes. The chime sounds could be replaced by simple electronic noises with MPU DIP switches s8 and s32. The designers strung together sounds to make tunes that played at the start of the game, saucer exit, bally bonus, and the end of the game. The sounds paid no homage to the theme. Gameplay include 2 flippers, 3 pop bumpers, 2 slingshots, a 4-bank drop targets, 5 standup targets, 2 star rollovers, a kick-out hole (saucer), and a free-ball return to the shooter lane.

thema | outer space

design | Gary Gayton
art | Kevin O’Connor

SS
4 player game
16.842 units produced
acquisitie | augustus 2022

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