(Topic ID: 255086)

KEENEY Pin Club - Flipper + Pre/Flipper All Welcome

By Dono

4 years ago


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  • 54 posts
  • 17 Pinsiders participating
  • Latest reply 5 months ago by Dono
  • Topic is favorited by 6 Pinsiders

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There are 54 posts in this topic. You are on page 1 of 2.
#1 4 years ago

Starting up this thread to share thoughts, experiences, tips, history and general info about Keeney pins. Hoping others can chime in, since there is virtually no info about this company out in cyberspace. Since I'm all in with getting a Poker Face up and running for the upcoming Atown show, I'm now bumping into all sorts of issues and roadblocks that require resolution. Hopefully this thread can provide just a bit of info to make future Keeney projects smoother than what I'm currently experiencing.

Keeney put out a bunch of pre-flipper/arcade games, but only 5 flipper pin games that I'm aware of (via info on IPDB)... unfortunately no production numbers are available for any of Keeney's flipper pins listed below:

1959-12 Hi Straight
1963-05 Go-Cart
1963-09 Poker Face
1963-12 Colorama
1964-08 Arrowhead

The general feeling as I work out the mechanical kinks to this game, is that the overall mechanical aspects of the game are mixed; the flipper design is ridiculous (basically impulse flippers, yes for 1963 it's really a joke!).

Most components such as step up units, relays, plungers, and other metal parts aren't as beefy as other manufacturers, same with pop bumper yokes (very thin). Fortunately Gottlieb units are very similar, and with a little surgery like parts can be used in many cases. Score reel mechs feel cheap; those units aren't nearly as well-designed as Gottlieb/WMS/Bally units.

I'll be posting more pix and interesting notes as the work continues.

If anyone has any Poker Face plastics or keeney parts in general please reach out.

#2 4 years ago

I still have games stached away, but from what I can recall, this 1958 is the only
Keeney machine I have. It's red translucent score reels are close to identicle to the
Bally's of the 50s. After picking it up years back, I restored it last Spring. What makes
it different from most P&Bs is once the ball leaves the ramp, it's all air time which is
most likely why (up to this point anyways), all that have played it gives it the thumbs
up..

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#3 4 years ago

I hope someone will bring a Keeney machine to Pintastic New England this year....there will be lots of Bonus Points for bringing one!

Question for Mopar about League Leader: is that bat button mechanically linked to the bat? It looks rather large for an electrical switch. And does yours have the replay counter? According to the Billboard ad, this game was available in novelty and replay models.
.................David Marston

#4 4 years ago
Quoted from Mopar:

What makes
it different from most P&Bs is once the ball leaves the ramp, it's all air time which is
most likely why (up to this point anyways), all that have played it gives it the thumbs
up..

That's a fabulous looking game... love the deep cabinet and graphics... backglass not too shabby either... you've no doubt got a rare bird right there! Do you have a schematic for the game? I'm asking because I've heard Keeney game schematics are tough to come by; PBR luckily had it and I scored a copy for the Poker Face. Did you have issues with having to replace any coils, and if so, I'd be interested in how you came up with a replacement(s).

Thanks for posting!

#5 4 years ago
Quoted from dmarston:

is that bat button mechanically linked to the bat?

There's two large green buttons. The one on the left energizes the ball lift motor which gets the ball
in motion. The one on the right swings the bat. The right button energizes a coil attached to the bat.
This machine has no Replay. I believe it originated in New York.
I do have the 1941 Scientific Machine Batting Practice that still needs to be gone through. The
bat on that one is mechanical by squeezing a handle..

Quoted from Dono:

Did you have issues with having to replace any coils, and if so, I'd be interested in how you came up with a replacement(s).

I don't have a schematic for the League Leader. This machine at one time had survived a flood. The outside cab. needed
much gluing but was able to save the original art.
Knowing that it survived a flood, I was surprise how decent the mechanics were. Never really checking things out
before storing it, I was always a little concerned about the mechanics especially the ball lift, but surprisingly, all
was not bad. Didn't need to replace any coils. Actually I had to add a coil. For some reason, if hitting a Super Home
Run (which doesn't happen often), the game would not start back up after scoring the addition 4 runs. Although it wasn't
hard to figure, I can't remember exactly where I wired in that extra coil, but it did the trick. After repairing the outside,
I did much work on the inside to get it to look the way it is. I traded a decent Bally small ball bowler for the machine. It
may have been a little gamble, but I think it paid of..

#6 4 years ago
Quoted from dmarston:

I hope someone will bring a Keeney machine to Pintastic New England this year....there will be lots of Bonus Points for bringing one!

If the show was at the same venue, I'd definitely consider it, but being further towards Boston, that's just too much of a trip for me right now (Baltimore area)... I may try to make it though if timing is right.

#7 4 years ago

The PPM has a Keeney Arrowhead, a truly beautiful game,
and a fun player
an early adopter of drop targets.

#8 4 years ago

I’m in. I have a Keeney shuffle alley in storage- when I get home I’ll get the title and see if I have any pics.

#9 4 years ago
Quoted from pinwiztom:

The PPM has a Keeney Arrowhead, a truly beautiful game,
and a fun player
an early adopter of drop targets.

Cant be many of those... it would be great to have some production numbers, but that may be info we'll never know.

I talked to Steve Young at PBR and he said that at one time Keeney was contracting some parts work for Gottlieb, but I didn't get any details other than that. I just started doing some work on the mechs of my Poker Face and I see parts that are extremely close if not spot on to Gottlieb. That being said, their mechs are interestingly differebt, in that for each mech type (flipper, kicker, pops) there is a metal frame with the hardware screwed to the frame, and the frame screwed to the playfield (similar to how flipper mechs were changed to in the mid to late 70s by other manufacturers); a much better design aspect from a longevity standpoint.

#10 4 years ago

I have a Panascope display that was used in Old Plantation and El Rancho (and maybe others?) in the early 1960s. It was mounted in the backbox frame above the backglass. It's a great little piece of tech.
Old-Plantation.gifOld-Plantation.gif
Has anyone seen one in a game? I'm curious how it was used.

More info at:
https://pinside.com/pinball/forum/topic/em-backglass-lighting-effects#post-4909216
Images at:
https://ipdb.org/showpic.pl?id=1708&picno=49258&zoom=1
https://ipdb.org/showpic.pl?id=1708&picno=49259&zoom=1

/Mark

#11 4 years ago
Quoted from MarkG:

I have a Panascope display that was used in Old Plantation and El Rancho (and maybe others?) in the early 1960s. It was mounted in the backbox frame above the backglass. It's a great little piece of tech.
[quoted image]
Has anyone seen one in a game? I'm curious how it was used.
More info at:
https://pinside.com/pinball/forum/topic/em-backglass-lighting-effects#post-4909216
Images at:
https://ipdb.org/showpic.pl?id=1708&picno=49258&zoom=1
https://ipdb.org/showpic.pl?id=1708&picno=49259&zoom=1
/Mark

I used to have a Keeney Flashback that utilized that display. Basically like an EM slot machine. Play for replays. It was kind of cool. Roy Parker art too.
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#12 4 years ago
Quoted from pinwiztom:

The PPM has a Keeney Arrowhead, a truly beautiful game,
and a fun player
an early adopter of drop targets.

Thank You Ed Krynski for yet another fun game.

#13 4 years ago

join this club as an aspirational member.
My friend has a Thriller and one day I'd like to find a Roll-A-Line, Lite-A-Line, Lucky Joker, etc
or like a 30s game like Mammoth or Repeater

#14 4 years ago
Quoted from Dono:

If the show was at the same venue, I'd definitely consider it, but being further towards Boston, that's just too much of a trip for me right now (Baltimore area)... I may try to make it though if timing is right.

The trip is about 40-45 minutes longer, coming from Baltimore. Depending on where in the Baltimore metro area you are, the whole trip is about 6 hours. Please try some MapQuest (or use your favorite source) calculations and see if it's feasible.
.................David Marston

#15 4 years ago

In the 1950's, Keeney was contracted by American Shuffleboard to build all of the electromechanical scoreboards for their shuffleboard tables. This was at the height of shuffleboard popularity. American was building their own scoreboards at the time, but demand was so high they couldn't keep up. So they contracted with Keeney to build the scoreboards. I think they did that until 1964. Then American Shuffleboard terminated the contract and resumed making their own scoreboards again in their own factory.

#16 4 years ago

Keeney made excellent shuffle alley machines,very heavy 6 players ,re - tractable pins , 4 different games could be played.

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#17 4 years ago
Quoted from KenLayton:

In the 1950's, Keeney was contracted by American Shuffleboard to build all of the electromechanical scoreboards for their shuffleboard tables.

I never knew. I have two American Shuffle Score Boards. One I believe from the late 40s,
and one from the 60s. Might have just missed the Keeneys. have to take a look..

Quoted from plgg3:

Keeney made excellent shuffle alley machines,very heavy 6 players ,re - tractable pins , 4 different games could be played.

Nice looking Shuffle. Looks to be from 1951/52
Very possibly the first Shuffle having multiple games..

#18 4 years ago
Quoted from KenLayton:

In the 1950's, Keeney was contracted by American Shuffleboard to build all of the electromechanical scoreboards for their shuffleboard tables....

Great info Ken...and yes, it looks like the same green/white score reels I have in Poker Face. I'll post some pins once I get the playfield done and off the rotisserie.

#19 4 years ago

That shuffle alley is a beauty!

#20 4 years ago

Keeney has an interesting Flipper setup On the Poker Face... uses a flat platform with a metal shaft housing that supports the flipper axle and built in coil stop... and a very odd crank configuration. Same design as Gottlieb with a few minor differences but the crank rides on the opposite side, and rotates on the housing! One of my cranks required a weld, so I used a 60s Gottlieb crank and modified to fit.

The flip configuration uses 2 coils... pressing flipper button enables the hot coil, and the NO EOS switch when closed enables the in series low power , emulating a dual wound coil. What’s wacky is that this game is 1963... why in hell they decided to use this config is beyond me... perhaps they had thousands of single wind coils on hand and decided this way was cheaper.

Photos show flipper config, new fiber links (check out the wear on the metal link)... wow!

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Added over 4 years ago:

Just to note that my info here is incorrect... there are two coils per flipper., high power and trip coil.. when the EOS CLOSES, it trips the 2nd coil, which in effect drops power to the flipper until the bottom of the stroke (when the EOS re-opens). In effect, an impulse flipper configuration... geez that's about the dumbest thing ever for 63!

#21 4 years ago

another poor quality Keeney part ... check out the broke metal pop bumper yoke... thinner and no reinforcement lip in back... no wonder it’s broken!!!

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#22 4 years ago
Quoted from Dono:

another poor quality Keeney part ... check out the broke metal pop bumper yoke... thinner and no reinforcement lip in back... no wonder it’s broken!!![quoted image]

Pic shows Gottlieb counterpart from a Mibs parts machine.

#23 4 years ago

don't burn me cause it doesn't have flippers

1940 keeney's bonus super bell 1940

running, needs a few adjustments. very hard to find here in australia.

been my first keeney after collecting for 40 years.

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#24 4 years ago

cool machine, but what IS the super bell payout? It doesn't actually tell you.

I assume you're supposed to cash out all your credits with the staff if you got the 500 bonus credits? Or is it so darn clever that if you had 500 credits and spent 2 more on a spin it would display the 100, 90, 80, 70, 60, 50, 40, and 8 credit lights? (498 total)

#25 4 years ago

Nice looking game... any Keeney game - flipperless/non-flipperless/novelty/bingo/arcade, etc. all welcome!!!

#26 4 years ago
Quoted from Dono:

another poor quality Keeney part ... check out the broke metal pop bumper yoke... thinner and no reinforcement lip in back... no wonder it’s broken!!!

After some experimenting and 'surgery', I ended up using a a Gottlieb bracket, Gottlieb A-1496 coil, Williams metal yoke, and the remaining Keeney parts to complete the assembly.

Again, not a big fan of Keeney pinball parts quality right now... I'll report back later as I continue to knock out additional mechanical component work.

#27 4 years ago

A few pix of the Poker Face playfield - slowly things are coming together - advance bumps, the single pop and new left side target faces... these from PBR are nice replacements. I don’t like the new clip that comes with the target faces though. The old clips, if you can get them off without breaking the tabs, work fine.

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2 weeks later
#28 4 years ago
Quoted from MarkG:

I have a Panascope display that was used in Old Plantation and El Rancho (and maybe others?) in the early 1960s. It was mounted in the backbox frame above the backglass. It's a great little piece of tech.
[quoted image]
Has anyone seen one in a game? I'm curious how it was used.
More info at:
https://pinside.com/pinball/forum/topic/em-backglass-lighting-effects#post-4909216
Images at:
https://ipdb.org/showpic.pl?id=1708&picno=49258&zoom=1
https://ipdb.org/showpic.pl?id=1708&picno=49259&zoom=1
/Mark

This Shawnee is being offered for free. It looks to have been converted to solid state at some point but looks like it might utilize the Panascope display. Maybe he could be talked out of that cool part if the entire machine isn't spoken for?
https://pinside.com/pinball/forum/topic/free-shawnee-slot-machine-keene-nh

2 weeks later
#29 4 years ago

Well, the Poker Face playfield is complete...

Now finishing up shopping the head mechanics; decent shape overall so not a big problem... however there are additional quality issues with this Keeney game:

1. Score reels are entirely plastic. Odd, considering Keeney used metal score reels on their bowlers, at least from the photos I've seen... I had to epoxy one spindle as it was cracked.
2. Score reel coils have a fiber frame, and when trying to remove the metal coil sleeve, the entire coil comes apart as shown... I may just replace with all Gottlieb coils here.
3. Knocker plunger - nylon tip separated from plunger... no biggie, just epoxy in place.

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#30 4 years ago
Quoted from Dono:

when trying to remove the metal coil sleeve, the entire coil comes apart as shown... I may just replace with all Gottlieb coils here.

Yea Don, those cardboard coils as I call them tend to fall apart pretty easily being 45+ years old. I had to replace one on a early 70's Gottlieb drop target bank recently.

1 week later
#31 4 years ago

Poker Face relay bank and associated relay contacts cleaned, steppers rebuilt and working properly, new fuse holders.. reinstalled this evening. Moved the playfield into the game, plugged it in, clicked the toggle switch and BAM, we have lights - sweet!!!

Backbox mechanics are done; I'll attach it once the backglass is cleared to inhibit further flaking. Here are some pix:

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#32 4 years ago

I recently had a Keeney “Royal Belles” (a seemingly rarer version of Eleven Belles) fall into my lap. It has 2 flippers but they’re turned outwards instead of inwards.

I’m unfamiliar with wood rail machines so I’m curious, is it a common design to have all the mechanisms attached to the door of the head? The entire machine wants to topple backwards as soon as I open the back box.

2 weeks later
#33 4 years ago
Quoted from Gingervitus:

I recently had a Keeney “Royal Belles” (a seemingly rarer version of Eleven Belles) fall into my lap. It has 2 flippers but they’re turned outwards instead of inwards.
I’m unfamiliar with wood rail machines so I’m curious, is it a common design to have all the mechanisms attached to the door of the head? The entire machine wants to topple backwards as soon as I open the back box.

Not sure what you refer to, can you provide a pic?

#34 4 years ago

I posted this info on another thread, but wanted to include it here for Keeney 'posterity'...

Keeney Poker Face came out in September of 1963. During the shop job, I pretty much dealt with all the little design and part nuances with little grumbling and fanfare, until I noticed that the flipper circuit is basically an IMPULSE design... REALLY? YUP!!!

The flipper setup uses a single wound coil (no low power) with a cutoff relay in the circuit, and a NO EOS "make" switch, so when the player hits the flipper button, at the top of the flip stroke the EOS switch trips the cutoff relay, cutting power to the flipper until the EOS switch opens again at the bottom of the stroke (flipper at rest).

I did confirm that the next pin Keeney produced 3 months later (COLORAMA - 12/63) sports a dual wound coil /NC EOS switch configuration similar to other manufacturers of the period.

Blows my mind that a pinball manufacturer in 1963 would in good conscience produce a game with an IMPULSE FLIPPER design... no wonder they couldn't make it in the flipper pin market and after a 5 pin run, dropped out to produce other game types.

Schematic showing the old-hat crappy impulse design follows:

IMG_4659[1202] (resized).JPGIMG_4659[1202] (resized).JPG
#35 4 years ago
Quoted from Dono:

After some experimenting and 'surgery', I ended up using a a Gottlieb bracket, Gottlieb A-1496 coil, Williams metal yoke, and the remaining Keeney parts to complete the assembly.
Again, not a big fan of Keeney pinball parts quality right now... I'll report back later as I continue to knock out additional mechanical component work.

Need to note here that Gottlieb coils are way too hot for Keeney pins (A-1496 as an example)... the Keeney coils run on 50V, about twice that of Gottlieb, so they are being taken out and replaced with Bally coils, since they run at approximately the same voltages.

#36 4 years ago

I have some Keeney parts for sale. They are stored away at this time. Please let me know if anyone is looking.
Thank you,
Matt

#37 4 years ago

Any pictures of the existing Keeney flipper assembly?

#38 4 years ago

A few interesting notes:

1... the original flipper pawl assembly is similar to Gottlieb, but installed differently (upside down compared to other manufacturers). Since I had to use a Gottlieb replacement pawl as the original was broken, I had to shorten the tab that holds the spring and drill new spring hole; nice to have a decent drill press!

2...installed new fiber links; originals were cheap thin metal that had elongated linkage holes and way too much slop.

3... the original coil wrap paper on almost all of this game's coils flaked off over the years, and/or ineligible or faded part no's. Used painter's tape for temporary solution.

4... check out the NO EOS switch, and associated cut-off relay; FUBAR.

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#39 4 years ago

Reminds me a lot of a classic Stern generation 1 flipper unit.

#40 4 years ago

On the home stretch with Keeney Poker Face... Got rid of the inferior impulse flipper setup and installed Bally dual wound coils; high power roughly same resistance as the original coils... had to perform surgery on the coil support brackets... she’s done and the playfield is ready to be popped back into the cabinet. Psyched to play a game on it soon.

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8 months later
#41 3 years ago

I'm looking for a B4-40 solenoid. Any thoughts on where to get one, or a suitable replacement. Resistance is 12.4 ohms. I don't know what the voltage is on Keeney games though, and I'm guessing it's AC?

#42 3 years ago
Quoted from seshpilot:

I'm looking for a B4-40 solenoid. Any thoughts on where to get one, or a suitable replacement. Resistance is 12.4 ohms. I don't know what the voltage is on Keeney games though, and I'm guessing it's AC?

Documentation on IPDB.org for a couple of Keeney games from 1963 says 50 volts AC.

#43 3 years ago
Quoted from MarkG:

Documentation on IPDB.org for a couple of Keeney games from 1963 says 50 volts AC.

Yes, it's 50V AC.

#44 3 years ago
Quoted from seshpilot:

I'm looking for a B4-40 solenoid. Any thoughts on where to get one, or a suitable replacement.

Can you give the physical size of the coil needed? Exact length and close diameter?
A Bally and/or United bowler coil should do the trick if physically matched..

#45 3 years ago

Thanks guys. Keeney peeps are a hardcore group of fans! Love it.

11 months later
#46 2 years ago

My nicely working Poker Face is heading out to the Pacific Pinball Museum, where it will be placed with other Keeney pin games of the era. Larry is still looking for a decent or better COLORAMA to complete their Keeney flipper pin line-up.

1 year later
#47 1 year ago

This is a long shot I have a Keeney's Hit Number. Very clean game and operational. I lack the instruction cards. Does anyone know of anyone with pictures of simular cards from this Era. Thanks!

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11 months later
#49 5 months ago

glad this popped up. picked up a colorama and all the flipper mechs were missing. can see how to make it work now thanks to the above.

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#50 5 months ago
Quoted from illawarra92:

glad this popped up. picked up a colorama and all the flipper mechs were missing. can see how to make it work now thanks to the above.[quoted image][quoted image]

Could you post a pic or two of your flipper setup once you have it in place please? It would help future Keeney pin owners. Also curious what the flipper coils used in that game, are they stamped with some type of Id No?

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