Trying to Identify this...

VegasDragonfli

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Hi all, I am trying to help someone identify this machine. We keep coming up with nothing that has both the VS and the Bally's on it. If someone could point me in the right direction, that would be very appreciated!! It does work, but could use a little fine tuning. The tag on the back says

Bally Manufacturing Corporation
Chicago, USA
E-1008-32
B-1008-32-26

There are numbers stamped onto the metal tag that read 10 27 80 and I assume this is a manufacturing date.

The writing in white reads "Vintage Slot & Amusement Company" and the writing in red above that reads "All Pays On Centerline".

Thanks for any help!!
Vegas Dragonfli
 

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Hi all, I am trying to help someone identify this machine. We keep coming up with nothing that has both the VS and the Bally's on it. If someone could point me in the right direction, that would be very appreciated!! It does work, but could use a little fine tuning. The tag on the back says

Bally Manufacturing Corporation
Chicago, USA
E-1008-32
B-1008-32-26

There are numbers stamped onto the metal tag that read 10 27 80 and I assume this is a manufacturing date.

The writing in white reads "Vintage Slot & Amusement Company" and the writing in red above that reads "All Pays On Centerline".

Thanks for any help!!
Vegas Dragonfli

Looks like an old Bally 5000? Just a guess....
 
Eh, I think its a little older than the 5000 series.
Post over at newlifegames, you can get a solid answer there. NLG is like the KLOV for slot machines.
 
Bally Slot Machine

It's a Bally E-1000 series slot machine. It was one of the first slots made with a computer board in it. Bally produced the E-1000 series and the E-2000 series machines before coming out with the 5000 series which was their first fully computerized slot. Both the E-1000 and the E-2000 series machines were a combination of both mechanical and computerized machines.
 
I can't think of the name of the "fix-it-all" manual off of the top of my head, but it has EVERYTHING you would want to know about slot machines. If you want, the next time I go to my gameroom I'll grab the name off of it. This book has all the troubleshooting info you would every want in it, even schematics. I have the E-2000 series but both models are covered in the book. Mine doesn't actually work, I bought it 4 years ago and it hit my to-do list.
 
It's a Bally E-1000 series slot machine. It was one of the first slots made with a computer board in it. Bally produced the E-1000 series and the E-2000 series machines before coming out with the 5000 series which was their first fully computerized slot. Both the E-1000 and the E-2000 series machines were a combination of both mechanical and computerized machines.

Wow, I was way off... Guess I was too many Captian/cokes deep when I answered that question, lol Sorry...
 
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