Back Bank-A-Ball

Sources

IPDB and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

Sources agree (5 fields)

technology_generation
pure-mechanical IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
month
4 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
year
1932 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
player_count
1 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
ipdb_id
6520 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog

Single source (8 fields)

gameplay_feature
IPDB Skill Shot used
ipdb.corporate_entity_name
IPDB J. F. Linck Corp. used
ipdb.notes
IPDB According to Automatic Age, February 1932, page 271, the manufacturer was a tool and die shop that incorporated in 1931 to enter into the production of newspaper vending machines. Mr. J.F. Linck was president and L.E. Battles was secretary-treasurer. On pages 30, 50, 80, and 92 of the April 1932 issue of The Coin Machine Journal, the manufacturer briefly advertises to watch for Bank-A-Ball, calling it "The Successor to the Pin Games". Another early game with a player-adjustable skill-shot diverter in the shooter lane is A.B.T.'s 1934 'Autobank'. used
ipdb.notable_features
IPDB 7 balls for 1 cent. The playfield has three pin score pockets, each with a metal pivoting flag to hold the balls in the pockets during the game, and a player-adjustable skill-shot diverter in the shooter lane, operated by a knob to the right of the ball shooter on the cabinet front, to aim the propelled ball towards the desired playfield score pocket. Five scoring pin pockets line the bottom of the playfield. Pushing a coin in the coin slide at start of game pivots the flags to drop any trapped balls and raises a retaining bar at bottom of playfield to let all balls return to ball trough for the new game. A small metal plate on the playfield lower apron indicates the manufacturer. The cabinet has a rear access door. used
corporate_entity
Flipcommons Catalog j-f-linck-corp used
title
Flipcommons Catalog bank-a-ball-6 used
name
Flipcommons Catalog Bank-A-Ball used
slug
Flipcommons Catalog bank-a-ball-7 used