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Author Topic: Sega slot machines  (Read 8635 times)
89chevyman
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« on: September 22, 2009, 02:08:03 PM »

Does anybody know anything about Load Sega slot machines built in the 1960's? There value or even parts availability. I know that they have Mills parts, but thats about it. Thanks.
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a69mopar
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« Reply #1 on: September 22, 2009, 02:42:34 PM »

I know that my brother had or had somemechanical Sega machines that were clones of Mills machines, not sure of age or value, but thought they were older, maybe 50s, and seemed to think they were going for $500-$800 a few years back, I'll ask him when I speak to him.  I believe they were a dark reddish with blue, and he may still have some.

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slotsteve
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« Reply #2 on: September 22, 2009, 02:59:25 PM »

Segas were  late 50,s thur 60,s we bought a load of them from england in 75 76 with some jenning  , mills  back them we are paying 35 to 50  usd each the bad part was shipping and hoping they sent you what you picked out  many crooks in england too , We had a doj  which got our games thur customs  only to lose the a few weeks later to   police from our town which held them for 3 years in which time nj started gaming in ac  and allowed pre 41  games ,after a long fight and some plam greasing we got them all back but 2  jennings which had hoppers and were able to sell them at 3 x what we were selling them for   before they took them , @ weeks ago there was a sega in a auction  in nc  sold for 650 and it wasn,t nice
Steve
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Jimise
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« Reply #3 on: September 23, 2009, 02:03:16 AM »

Good luck with Frank   bust gut laughing  rotflmao  Tongue Out 
Does anybody know anything about Load Sega slot machines built in the 1960's? There value or even parts availability. I know that they have Mills parts, but thats about it. Thanks.
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Jimise
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« Reply #4 on: September 24, 2009, 01:15:29 AM »

Here are a couple of pictures of the Lord Sega machine


* sega 1.jpg (7.6 KB, 225x300 - viewed 1888 times.)

* sega 2.jpg (8.62 KB, 300x225 - viewed 1774 times.)
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Op-Bell
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« Reply #5 on: September 25, 2009, 04:35:55 AM »

SEGA started life in 1957 as Service Games of Nevada, a Vegas-based Mills distributor. Originally they rebuilt Mills games to order for customers who had a particular configuration in mind, using genuine Mills parts to begin with. To cut costs, they reverse engineered the Mills components and had them made locally. Then they moved overseas, setting up operations in Spain and Japan and marketing their machines to American overseas service bases. When gaming was legalized in Britain they made a deal with the British Bally distributor and became a top seller in Britain, introducing many new models (including the Lord Sega) specially tailored to British taste. That's the main reason you don't see many of them in the US - an overseas market that took all they could produce. Sega Enterprises of Tokyo eventually became a fully Japanese maker of video games, while Sega SA of Spain became quite a big player in the AWP market and was absorbed by (I believe) Recreativos Franco.

The mechanical models don't deviate much from the Mills Hitop mechanism, and Mills parts are mostly interchangeable - not that anyone can be sure these days that any parts are genuine Mills, since all the distributors cloned them enthusiastically.
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Jimise
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« Reply #6 on: September 25, 2009, 11:29:45 PM »

That was a cool post, Thanks for the info!!  The post above this one  yes
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stayouttadabunker
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« Reply #7 on: September 26, 2009, 03:08:15 AM »

That was a cool post, Thanks for the info!!  The post above this one  yes

 rotflmao Okay now,
Who was scrolling up and down the page?
C'mon now...raise your hands.... Tongue Out
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