Japanese Slot Machine Volume Control

Door key + reset key + volume control + one month guarantee All Pachislo machines are been used but are professional refurbished. It will have a minor scratches, stains and cigarette burns due to previous use in Japanese Casino Parlor.

  1. Japanese Home Slot Machine
  2. Igt Slot Machine Volume Control
  3. Japanese Slot Machine Repair
  4. Japanese Slot Machine Volume Control Reviews
FarFromVegas

I ended up ordering Galaxy Railways. It should ship out on Monday. I paid the extra $25 for volume controls and I'm anxious to see how well they work.
I picked that machine, because I'm wanting this as a conversation piece (as well as playing it). It has the most bells and whistles I could find, with a reel mode, a video slot mode, and touch screen.
I'll post more after I get it.


Mine are older, and I found myself disconnecting the speakers sometimes. Good call on the volume control. Now my second son is studying Japanese, so I hope at some point he can decipher what they're saying during the features.
Each of us is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts. Preparing for a fight about your bad decision is not as smart as making a good decision.
Ayecarumba


I have a Japanese slot machine in my garage that I don't want. It pays in balls, rather than coins, and is very loud. I would be happy to give it to any active member of the forum who wants it, however you have to haul it away.


Quote: Ayecarumba

Hi Wizard. Does it still work? If so, I'd be happy to take it off your hands.


Hi Wizard. I've got a van and a buddy. PM me if the offer still stands.
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication - Leonardo da Vinci
JohnnyQ
We have a Lara Croft Tomb Raider game very similar to this one:
http://www.ivgstores.com/IVG2/Y/ProductID-89320-.htm
It is pretty loud. The LCD screen is kind of cool, which is why
we bought it. A local wholesale store had it a couple of
years ago, I think on sale for maybe $ 135 or something
Machinelike that.
Its neat to have but we don't play it much for some
reason ( we hardly EVER use it ).
You know the type always acting cool, Pretender;Take the risk or give up your cards, Pretender, Oh, Oh. - Iris/Avsec
JoeTheDragon

I ended up ordering Galaxy Railways. It should ship out on Monday. I paid the extra $25 for volume controls and I'm anxious to see how well they work.
I picked that machine, because I'm wanting this as a conversation piece (as well as playing it). It has the most bells and whistles I could find, with a reel mode, a video slot mode, and touch screen.
I'll post more after I get it.


They don't have digital volume control?
dudestupid

They don't have digital volume control?


They do have a 3 or 4 position switch, that people describe as 'loud, louder, and loudest.'
I guess what's quiet in pachinko parlor, is still pretty loud in your house.
  • Page 2 of 2

AT first glance, it looks as if Eddie Cramer is operating a casino out of his modest one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn Heights, or at least one as Ziggy Stardust might have imagined it.

Japanese slot machines known as pachislos — all flashing lights and tinny, obnoxious noise — rest on just about every horizontal surface of the 500-square-foot space, including the sink and the stove. In his living room, where the walls are painted black to match the carpet, there are nearly a dozen machines, and the only furnishings are a few scoop-backed stools.

Japanese Home Slot Machine

In the bedroom is a bed (surprise!) and a lot more slot machines.

Your first assurance that this is not a gambling den is Mr. Cramer himself, a soft-spoken man who tells his guest, fidgeting, “I don’t really even like having people in here.”

The other assurance is that these aren’t technically gambling machines. Mr. Cramer is one of the country’s foremost collectors of pachislos, cheap, slightly tacky slot machines that have amassed a cultlike following in the United States over the last 10 years. He began collecting them about four years ago after he saw one in a mall on Staten Island. Today, he lives mostly at his girlfriend’s apartment so he can use his own to house his collection.

Pachislos (pronounced PATCH-ee-slows) look much like any slot machine you would find in a Las Vegas casino. But they differ from American slots in small but significant ways.

Continue reading the main story

For one, they operate only on tokens, not currency. For another, they supposedly involve some skill: below each spinning wheel is a button that stops it manually, meaning pachislo players earn their jackpots by hitting the button at the right moment. One does not have to be a skeptic on par with, say, Aristotle, to doubt that this element of skill is anything more than illusory, but it is enough to exempt the machines from most states’ laws barring home ownership of gambling equipment.

Also, they are not just slot machines. Many of them, particularly the newer models, have LCD screens on which elaborate video-game-style narratives play out. And they have some oddball traits that appeal to kitsch-happy collectors: colorful anime-style graphics, ear-splitting sound effects and unfortunate Japanese approximations of American themes like “Rambo” and “Harley-Davidson.” An Obama pachislo comes decorated with an image of the president, arms folded, in front of the presidential seal and an American flag.

Pachislos are considerably cheaper than American slots: basic machines cost about $250, whereas a decommissioned Las Vegas slot machine can cost from $800 to $2,000.

In Japan, compulsive pachislo players are known to sit glassy eyed for hours in seedy pachinko parlors (named for the vertical pinball game that spawned pachislo). Although gambling is illegal in Japan, players can trade their tokens for “prizes” — empty plastic boxes or cigarette lighters — that they then take to redeeming centers across the street and trade for cash.

These machines “are very mesmerizing, they’re very soothing,” said David Plotz, the editor of Slate, who wrote about pachinko parlors for the Japan Society after spending time in Japan in 2001. “They are a form of escape in a country where there is very little of that.”

In the United States, however, the obsession seems to be more about collecting than playing. Collectors speak of sacrificing whole floors of their homes to accommodate their ever-growing collections. They gather on sites like Pachitalk.com and PachisloDB.com to share reviews of the newest machines or trade tips on where to find rare ones. And YouTube is filled with hundreds of hours of pachislo enthusiasts showing off their chirping, flashing collections.

Brian Evans is a retired Navy technician who discovered pachislos when he was stationed in Japan in the early 1990s. He has more than 35 pachislo machines in his home in Atlantic Beach, Fla., plus close to 20 pachinko machines.

“My neighbors thought I was crazy when they started seeing FedEx or UPS delivery boxes once or twice or three times a month,” he said. “But they came over and are like, ‘Hey, these are pretty neat.’ ”

For many American collectors, pachislos are the first experience with slot machines of any kind.

“I actually don’t like to gamble, because I don’t like to lose money,” said Rita Schack of Pearland, Tex., who made about $10,000 importing and selling pachislo machines last year on her Web site, BlueHotaru.com. “But once I found out the technology that goes into them and the great music they play and the flashing lights and the LCD videos they play, I just fell in love with them.”

She added: “The only problem now is fitting them in the house.”

But mention pachislos to a slot machine purist like Bob Levy, an antique slot machine dealer in Pennsauken, N.J., and prepare yourself for a good talking-to.

“They’re junk, they’re disposable,” Mr. Levy said. “If you’re a kid or a senior citizen, they’ll keep you busy. But they’re kind of not terrific for a serious person.”

Chris Voges, a 40-year-old slot machine technician for Bally’s casinos, disagrees. He began collecting pachislos five years ago because he was impressed with the technology and the level of game play compared with American slots.

“It’s not just pulling the handle and waiting for the wheels to stop,” he said. “There’s a little more of a story line to play through.”

As a technician, Mr. Voges found himself taken in by the pachislos’ holographic displays and LCDs (he does not work on pachislos professionally). “American slot machines are just now catching up” in terms of technology, he said. Mr. Voges now has 15 pachislo machines in the basement of his Seaford, Del., home.

Can all this fun be legal? That depends on where you are. At least two states, Connecticut and Washington, have ruled that pachislos fall under existing laws barring home ownership of slot machines, and most dealers won’t ship there. Other states, like California, have deemed them legal as long as they are not converted to accepting cash. But most states, including New York, apparently have yet to grapple with the question.

“Before anyone acquires one of these machines, we recommend that they speak to either their local police agency, the district attorney’s office or consult with an attorney,” said Joseph Mahoney, a spokesman for the New York State Racing and Wagering Board.

Igt Slot Machine Volume Control

Still, because pachislos are sold and traded almost exclusively online, and because most states don’t seem to put much effort into enforcing laws against them, most collectors have no trouble acquiring pachislos wherever they live.

Japanese Slot Machine Repair

In any case, it is unlikely that most states have to worry about pachislo enthusiasts parlaying their collections into gambling operations. Ask a collector how to convert a pachislo to accept cash and you will mostly likely get a dressing down.

Japanese Slot Machine Volume Control Reviews

“You do not discuss converting these over to coin-operated machines,” said Mr. Evans, the retired Navy technician. “It’s just looked down upon.”