An authentic slot machine is a big investment (well over $1,000) to most people. These vintage machines are great conversation pieces as well as a great part of our history. Here are some tips so you don’t get burned!
- Mills Bursting Cherry Slot Machine Repair
- Mills 5 Cent Slot Machine
- Mills Bursting Cherry Slot Machine
Mills Slot Machine Mills Bursting Cherry.25 cent slot machine. Up for sale is a 25 cent mills Bursting Cherry slot machine with the stand, from the 1930's To make a long story short, it plays and pays as it should, as far as the condition goes, please look at the pictures, this is a nice machine.
Take note. The following models of slot machines have been reproduced.
Mills War Eagle, Mills Golden Nugget, Mills Castle Front, Mills Bursting Cherry (AKA Brown Front), Mills Wolf Head (AKA Lion Head), Mills Hightop, Watling Treasury and Watling Rol-A-Top.
For Starters Simply Look At The Machine
Take a look at the castings, the wood base & sides, and the mechanism. If they all look brand new then they probably are. Look at where the door fits into the wood base. Does it have nice sharp edges? If so, then it is probably new. Look at the mechanism, is it super clean? If so, then it is probably brand new.
Most people concentrate on the outside of the machine when they restore it. They will only bead blast the mechanism if it is rusty. In any case, the cabinet, even if it has been restored, should show signs of its age.
Serial Numbers
Reproductions do NOT have serial numbers stamped in the castings. If you are thinking about buying a Mills machine, for example, ask the seller for the serial number. This is probably the easiest way to determine if the machine is legitimate or not.
More on Mills Machines
Most reproductionMills machines are quarter denomination. In reality, very few of these machines that were made in the 30’s were quarter machines. Most of them were nickel.
Mills Bursting Cherry Slot Machine Repair
Another warning sign is the payout. If the machine pays on a single cherry, then there is a good chance the machine is a reproduction. However, legitimate machines that were made in the 30s required two cherries before they paid out.
Another warning sign is the back door. If it is totally smooth and painted glossy black, then it is a reproduction back door. Original back doors are not totally smooth. They are made of heavy gauge steel. Sometimes original machines have reproduction back doors because the original got lost.
Some people will say the machine has to be original because it has a red Mills sticker on the side of the machine. You can get these stickers for $1.50 and they are used when people restore a machine. When it comes to proving that a machine is not fake they mean nothing.
Also, look at the slides. If they are plastic (originals are brass) then get away from the machine. Most of the people making the fakes use metal slides, just like the originals. The really bad knock-offs use plastic slides.
Golden Nuggets
Most of the Golden Nuggets listed on eBay are fake, phony, reproduction, remanufactured machines. Very few original Golden Nuggets exist. Fortunately, it’s easy to tell an original from a fake.
Original Golden Nuggets have the following:
1) A formic cabinet – repros have a solid wood base.
2) Extra wide coin tray – repros have a smaller coin tray.
3) Award card is stamped – repros are silk screened.
4) Most repros do not have the horizontal check detector lever on the escalator.
5) Most repros do not have the verticle check detection lever on the mechanism.
6) Most repros have a perfectly smooth reproduction back door.
Conclusion
If you don’t mind owning a reproduction, understand that it has zero value as an antique! It is against eBay rules to sell reproduction machines. If eBay ever decides to enforce their own rules, you may be stuck with a machine that you cannot sell.
Mills 5 Cent Slot Machine
Serial # 447390
Purchased by Cmdr. Edward V. Horne in 1948 from the Officers Club at the American naval base in Pago Pago, Samoa. This slot machine was one of many located on American military bases throughout the country and abroad. In the late 40's however, slot machines were banned from military bases and orders were sent directing that all machines be removed and or destroyed. This one was slated to be thrown in the Pago Pago harbor but as is often the case in matters like this, exceptions were allowed and the machines were offered at $5 a piece to anyone willing to haul them off.
Mills Bursting Cherry Slot Machine
By that time this machine had been in service for 11 years and would have been considered 'long in the tooth' by most casino operators. The 'useful' life of a machine of this type in a casino environment is typically about 4 years after which they were usually junked and replaced with newer models. According to John Hayes of San Diego Slot Machine, this one had seen lots of service before it ended up in our hands. Some repairs and adjustments have been made to the inner mechanisms and it was repainted from its original brown to green. Brown or blue were the original color choices but green was not one of them. The models with the brown front predominated and were often referred to by repairmen as 'The Brown Front' slot.
Another feature of this machine is that it is made from cast iron rather than aluminum. Although that puts it into the 'rare' category, the aluminum bodies are considered more desirable as they are lighter and show a smother, shinier surface when painted. Cast iron was only used for a short period of time and because of weight and a tendency to pit and show surface mottling, they were changed to aluminum early in their production.
I had this machine restored as close as possible to its original color and condition by John Hayes of San Diego Slot Machine in Nov of 2014.
Personal note: My first memory of this machine was in 1955 when it was sent from our house in Chevy Chase Maryland to China Lake California where my father was the base legal officer. Like most 5 year olds I was fascinated by the machine and not just because I could swipe nickels out of the back and buy candy at the Navy Exchange. Even then it was considered a collector's item and it traveled with our family 2 more times across the US. It never stopped being one of my dad's most prized possessions. At our house in Coronado it was placed in the back apartment on a somewhat tipsy wooden shipping box. During those days Dad's biggest concern was that one of my sisters children might be crushed if the thing fell over on them. When she visited he would send me to the back to check on them to make sure they were careful.