Back Hoss-Feathers

Sources

IPDB and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

Conflicts resolved (2 fields)

gameplay_feature
IPDB Pop Bumpers ×8 used IPDB Reversed Flippers ×2 used
theme
IPDB Horse Racing IPDB Sports Flipcommons Catalog Sports used Flipcommons Catalog Horse Racing used

Sources agree (4 fields)

credit
Gordon Horlick — Design IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
technology_generation
electromechanical IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
player_count
1 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog
ipdb_id
6286 IPDB, Flipcommons Catalog

Single source (9 fields)

ipdb.manufacturer_trade_name
IPDB Williams used
ipdb.corporate_entity_name
IPDB Williams Manufacturing Company used
ipdb.model_number
IPDB 61 used
ipdb.notes
IPDB The manufacturer's documentation repeatedly refers to this game using a hyphen, as 'Hoss-Feathers'. Two manufacturer�s original playfield drawings exist for this 1-player game (not shown here). One drawing, identified as 'Hoss Feathers' is marked 61-1 and is dated 10/8/51 and has the signed initials GTH. The other drawing, identified as 'Horsefeathers' is marked 61-2, has no date, and has the signed initials HEW. Duncan Brown has seen both drawings and provided us the following information:Both versions of model #61 are full-fledged, full-sized single-player pinball playfields from that era, with a ball shooter lane and an outhole trough and everything. Harry�s drawing is complete, while Gordon�s looks unfinished - things are rearranged a bit but nothing is labeled. Maybe because they abandoned the project? The two drawings are similar, but different. Given all we know about how Harry Williams was sending in playfields [to Chicago, from elsewhere in the USA where he was living] and Gordon Horlick was turning them into games, and given a design note where Harry instructs Sam Stern and Gordon what changes they might want to make once actually building and playing the game, I am assuming Harry�s drawing came first and Gordon�s came second and the game never got made. It would have been an expensive game! The game had 8 jet bumpers (!) in addition to the standard-ish two backwards flippers with a lane between them at the bottom. Gordon�s version rearranged the bumpers a bit and had two lanes at the center top instead of Harry�s one lane there, but was otherwise largely identical. Note that Harry called it "Horsefeathers" while Gordon called it "Hoss Feathers" but it�s definitely the same game. We know from the above description that this Model 61, while never produced, did not become Model 65 'Horsefeathers' or 'Sweepstakes', no model number, each a 2-player game from 1952 with a console cabinet and dual playfields. used
ipdb.notable_features
IPDB Reversed flippers (2), Pop bumpers (8). used
corporate_entity
Flipcommons Catalog williams-manufacturing-company used
title
Flipcommons Catalog hoss-feathers used
name
Flipcommons Catalog Hoss-Feathers used
slug
Flipcommons Catalog hoss-feathers used