Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
November 22, 2024, 02:25:31 AM

Login with username, password and session length
* Home Help Arcade Login Register
.
+  Forum
|-+  **Video Slots** Gaming machines
| |-+  IGT Fortune 1 Sircoma/Poker.
| | |-+  Sircoma IGT A brief History
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »
Pages: [1] Go Down Print
Author Topic: Sircoma IGT A brief History  (Read 9209 times)
Thor777
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.Tech NLG Member 1000+ Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 415
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1419


Slave to my CAT's !!!


« on: October 01, 2008, 11:52:21 PM »

victory
Guest

   Sircoma IGT A brief History
« on: August 26, 2005, 07:22:35 AM »   

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thought I would start this one off with a brief history on Sircoma video poker machines. Founded in the late 70's by William "Si" Redd who started the SI Redd Coin op cOMpAmy. See the caps? thus SIRCOMA. Si tried to get his machine to fly with Bally, however Bally just didn't see a future in Video poker and scraped the project ( some of the first Sircomas actually have Bally boards in them (late 70' to early 80's). Si went on to form his own company and called it IGT...WoW! If Bally only knew then what it knows now...the story of my life. Si passed away just a few years ago (2003). I have high hopes that this forum will help some  collectors like myself to restore these awsome pieces of history. Happy Trails to you....Victory 
 
 
Logged

My CAT is smarter than your honor student  !!!
Thor777
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.Tech NLG Member 1000+ Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 415
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1419


Slave to my CAT's !!!


« Reply #1 on: October 01, 2008, 11:53:12 PM »

Ron
Guest

   Re: Sircoma IGT A brief History
« Reply #1 on: November 21, 2005, 01:37:09 PM »   

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Any idea where I can get manuals/schematics on
a Sarcoma SG-202 video poker machine?

Ron
morris@jps.net
Logged

My CAT is smarter than your honor student  !!!
Thor777
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.Tech NLG Member 1000+ Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 415
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1419


Slave to my CAT's !!!


« Reply #2 on: October 01, 2008, 11:54:12 PM »

belbenchtech
NLG Member

Belbenchtechs Repair Logs.

   Re: Sircoma IGT A brief History
« Reply #2 on: November 21, 2005, 03:23:29 PM »   

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ron,
Have you looked at belbenchtech repair logs...under IGT Fortune I Boards...a Sircoma is the predecessor of the Fortune I...I believe the MPU boards are twins, correct me if I'm wrong (wouldn't be the first time...)  Duh!
Admittedly, the Fortune I schematics aren't the best quality, I guess you can't expect too much from a copy of a copy of a copy...

Hope it's of some help.

Mike><>
Logged

My CAT is smarter than your honor student  !!!
Thor777
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.Tech NLG Member 1000+ Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 415
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1419


Slave to my CAT's !!!


« Reply #3 on: October 01, 2008, 11:54:58 PM »

BuddmanTx
Guest

   Re: Sircoma IGT A brief History
« Reply #3 on: March 13, 2006, 12:17:54 AM »   

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hey there,
    I am not sure about the sg pokers however the sg kenos had as many as 4 full sized boards in them which are diffenatly different form fortune 1. Where  the main board located is the key....over the monitor it will be the same as fortune 1 with maybe a few exceptions. if there are 2 to 4 boards in a cage along side the hopper they are not the same as fortune 1..I do have a complete unmolested manuel for fortune 1 games, and i believe it has main processor board as well as io board sechmatics in it. let me know if i can be of assistence. About 80% of failures I have seen over the years with SG games was power supply related.
BuddmanTx



Quote from: belbenchtech on November 21, 2005, 03:23:29 PM
Ron,
Have you looked at belbenchtech repair logs...under IGT Fortune I Boards...a Sircoma is the predecessor of the Fortune I...I believe the MPU boards are twins, correct me if I'm wrong (wouldn't be the first time...)
Admittedly, the Fortune I schematics aren't the best quality, I guess you can't expect too much from a copy of a copy of a copy...

Hope it's of some help.

Mike><>
 
Logged

My CAT is smarter than your honor student  !!!
Op-Bell
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.NLG Member 501 to 1000 Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 326
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 854



« Reply #4 on: October 02, 2008, 12:48:42 AM »

Quote
Thought I would start this one off with a brief history on Sircoma video poker machines. Founded in the late 70's by William "Si" Redd who started the SI Redd Coin op cOMpAmy. See the caps? thus SIRCOMA. Si tried to get his machine to fly with Bally, however Bally just didn't see a future in Video poker and scraped the project ( some of the first Sircomas actually have Bally boards in them (late 70' to early 80's). Si went on to form his own company and called it IGT...WoW! If Bally only knew then what it knows now...the story of my life. Si passed away just a few years ago (2003). I have high hopes that this forum will help some  collectors like myself to restore these awsome pieces of history.

Actually the history is a bit more complicated than that. I think this was the first modern poker machine, in that it was the first to deal and draw from a single 52 card deck and pay off automatically (1967 Dale Pokermatic). The microprocessor hadn't been invented in 1967, nor had the first video game (Pong), so it would have been too complicated to use a video monitor even if it had crossed Dale's mind, which it probably didn't. Si Redd at the time was running Bally Distribution Co, the main sales outlet for Bally in Nevada, and making a freakin' fortune at it. He used the money to start buying up small gaming companies, like Raven Electronics in 1971. Dale wouldn't sell, though, so he did the next best thing and bought Dale's design engineers, who produced the Bally Computer Poker in the early 1970s. Note the external resemblance, though internally the Bally Distribution design is way different from the Dale.



* Dale_Pokermatic_s.jpg (44.59 KB, 313x600 - viewed 619 times.)

* BCP_s.JPG (50.75 KB, 364x600 - viewed 531 times.)
Logged
Op-Bell
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.NLG Member 501 to 1000 Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 326
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 854



« Reply #5 on: October 02, 2008, 01:13:39 AM »

Meantime, Stan Fulton (later CEO of Anchor Games) started playing with these new-fangled microprocessors and came up with the first video slot machine using a color TV monitor in 1975. His company was called Fortune Coin. The following year, Bally (the home team in Chicago) produced a microprocessor-based video poker game with a black and white monitor. Fortune copied it with a color monitor in 1977. At around this time Bally (the home team) had noticed how much money Redd was making with Bally Distribution Co and decided to buy him out and take over distribution themselves. Si Redd agreed, but had it written in the contract that he retained the rights to all the electronic games, including Poker, in return for not competing with Bally on the reel games. I think the agreement was for 5 years. In any event, Si Redd now had a great deal of money, which he used to purchase Fortune Coin (and all the other video slot makers of the era). The conglomerate was variously named A-1 Supply, Fortune and Casino Services until it adopted the name SIRCOMA in 1979. In 1981 it went public as IGT.

While Redd had a monopoly on pokers he was selling them for incredible sums, $12000 or more at a time when ordinary machines were in the $2000 range. Bally noticed this and brought out their own color Poker in 1981. Si Redd sued, got an injunction to stop them selling it, and $2.5 million damages. They eventually got to sell Pokers in 1982 when the agreement ran out. They also got an unpleasant surprise when they discovered Redd may not have been actually competing with reel slots, but he'd sure been busy developing them while he waited. The new IGT S slots totally ate Bally's market. And that's where we are today.

Si Redd invested in a lot of small gaming-related companies. I worked for one of them, as I discovered when I bumped into Si himself wandering in the corridor. He greeted me like an old friend, even though we'd never met before. What a nice old man.
Logged
uniman
Senior Full time Member.
Sr.Tech NLG Member 1000+ Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 695
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 1830



« Reply #6 on: October 02, 2008, 08:00:13 PM »

Meantime, Stan Fulton (later CEO of Anchor Games) started playing with these new-fangled microprocessors and came up with the first video slot machine using a color TV monitor in 1975. His company was called Fortune Coin. The following year, Bally (the home team in Chicago) produced a microprocessor-based video poker game with a black and white monitor. Fortune copied it with a color monitor in 1977. At around this time Bally (the home team) had noticed how much money Redd was making with Bally Distribution Co and decided to buy him out and take over distribution themselves. Si Redd agreed, but had it written in the contract that he retained the rights to all the electronic games, including Poker, in return for not competing with Bally on the reel games. I think the agreement was for 5 years. In any event, Si Redd now had a great deal of money, which he used to purchase Fortune Coin (and all the other video slot makers of the era). The conglomerate was variously named A-1 Supply, Fortune and Casino Services until it adopted the name SIRCOMA in 1979. In 1981 it went public as IGT.

While Redd had a monopoly on pokers he was selling them for incredible sums, $12000 or more at a time when ordinary machines were in the $2000 range. Bally noticed this and brought out their own color Poker in 1981. Si Redd sued, got an injunction to stop them selling it, and $2.5 million damages. They eventually got to sell Pokers in 1982 when the agreement ran out. They also got an unpleasant surprise when they discovered Redd may not have been actually competing with reel slots, but he'd sure been busy developing them while he waited. The new IGT S slots totally ate Bally's market. And that's where we are today.

Si Redd invested in a lot of small gaming-related companies. I worked for one of them, as I discovered when I bumped into Si himself wandering in the corridor. He greeted me like an old friend, even though we'd never met before. What a nice old man.

Sure like the history lesson!! K+ again!

What about the brief aristocrat/IGT connection and the M-slot?
My best guess would be IGT connected with Aristocrat when the 5-years was up, then dumped Aristocrat when the M-slot came out in 1983? The S machine with RNG in 84-85, and then S+ in ?
Am I close? And when did the S+ first appear?
Logged
Op-Bell
Contributing Gold NLG Member
Sr.NLG Member 501 to 1000 Post
*

Total Karma Storms: 326
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 854



« Reply #7 on: October 02, 2008, 09:26:35 PM »

Quote
My best guess would be IGT connected with Aristocrat when the 5-years was up, then dumped Aristocrat when the M-slot came out in 1983?
I believe you are right. IGT distributed Aristocrat for a number of years, then when they had their own product they not only dumped them, but poisoned the water with Nevada Gaming so that Aristocrat couldn't get licensed here until they cut all ties with the founder, Len Ainsworth, and made him sell all his stock. They were shut out of Nevada until about 2001, and although they had a big office on Double-R Drive in Reno close enough to throw stones through IGT's window, they couldn't bring a machine into the state even to put in their own showroom. Aristocrat returned the favor with their own local lawmakers by shutting IGT out of the Australian market for many years, and to this day IGT Australia is a very small outfit, whereas Aristocrat is number 2 now in the USA. If the opportunity ever arises for them to cut IGT's throat, it should be a good spectacle. Len Ainsworth by all accounts is still hell-bent on revenge, though at his advanced age he may not live long enough to get satisfaction.

Regarding the stepper slots, the story circles back on itself, because the holder of the US patent for a machine with stepper reels was the founder of Dale Electronics, Dale Rodesch - US Patent 4,099,772, filed 1975, assigned to Centronics Data Corp (Gamex). Gamex folded, IGT copied, Rodesch sued. IGT held him off for many years with arguments about the claims and sheer harassment, like the time they sent 40 lawyers to put him in deposition for 3 straight days, but in the end they settled, around 2000 I believe, for a fairly trivial sum like $3 mil. I don't know the exact details.
Logged
monitorman
NLG Member 101 to 500 Post
***

Total Karma Storms: 9
Offline Offline

Gender: Male
Posts: 129



« Reply #8 on: October 04, 2008, 06:17:34 PM »

I remember when Sarcoma, thay had the old DRAW-80 game. Fixing edge connectors and replacing 1 and 5 amp fuses. That was back in the day...
Logged
Pages: [1] Go Up Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  


If you find this site helpful, Please Consider Making a small donation to help defray the cost of hosting and bandwidth.



Newlifegames.com    Newlifegames.net    Newlifegames.org
   New Life Games    NewLifeGames  NLG  We Bring new Life to old Games    1-888-NLG-SLOTS
Are all Copyright and Trademarks of New Life Games LLC 1992 - 2021


FAIR USE NOTICE:

This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.
We make such material available in an effort to advance awareness and understanding of the issues involved.
We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law.
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

For more information please visit: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.

If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use,
you must obtain permission directly from the copyright owner.

NewLifeGames.net Web-Site is optimized for use with Fire-Fox and a minimum screen resolution of 1280x768 pixels.


Powered by SMF 1.1.20 | SMF © 2013, Simple Machines
Loon Designed by Mystica
Updated by Runic Warrior
Page created in 0.118 seconds with 20 queries.