Back Hi Fly

Sources

IPDB and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

Conflicts resolved (1 field)

theme
IPDB Baseball IPDB Sports Flipcommons Catalog Sports used Flipcommons Catalog Baseball used

Sources agree (5 fields)

credit
Charles Solinski — Design IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
technology_generation
pure-mechanical IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
year
1946 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
player_count
1 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
ipdb_id
5615 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog

Single source (8 fields)

ipdb.corporate_entity_name
IPDB Central Manufacturing Co. used
ipdb.image_urls
IPDB ["https://www.ipdb.org/images/5615/image-1.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/5615/image-3.jpg","https://www.ipdb.org/images/5615/image-2.jpg"] used
ipdb.notes
IPDB This is a table top game with a vertical playfield. First post-war game from this manufacturer. A Billboard article dated Sep-28-1946 page 102 indicates that the player deposits a coin and shoots it into play, to fall into playfield slots or grooves. No balls are used. The same article refers to this machine as a pin game. While the term "pin game" is not untrue for a game having pins on its playfield, as this one has, this term more often denotes the use of round pinballs and not just pins. Because 'Hi Fly' does not use pinballs, we classify it as Not A Pinball and maintain this listing to clarify and expand the Billboard article. used
ipdb.notable_features
IPDB 1 cent or 5 cent play. Game advertised as 19 inches high, 16 inches wide, and 10 inches deep. Has an anti-tilt mechanism. No balls are used in this game. The player inserts coins and propels them onto the playfield to bounce between the pins and into score pockets for singles, doubles, triples, and home runs. The instructions state that, before inserting coin, player must push button on top of game to reset the tilt if needed and to clear the previous score, which could only mean removing from the playfield any coins left in the score pockets from the previous game. Reportedly, these played coins would then drop into a cash can corresponding to the pocket hit, and coins that did not score would drop to the bottom of the game. This suggests that winning scores at game's end could be reported to the location for payout before the button is pushed, and the owner of the machine could later count the segregated coins to reimburse the location. used
corporate_entity
Flipcommons Catalog central-manufacturing-co used
title
Flipcommons Catalog hi-fly used
name
Flipcommons Catalog Hi Fly used
slug
Flipcommons Catalog hi-fly used