1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING

1968-Bally-Dogies-Ultra-Rare-Pinball-Machine-Working-FREE-SHIPPING-01-bllg 1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING

1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING
Very clean and well preserved 1968 Bally Dogies Pinball Machine. Works well, has new rubber and ball (not pictured) game plays fast and fun! The playfield and backglass are in very nice condition, the cabinet has original paint that is flaking and yellowed with age which is usual for the games from this era. Bally DOGIES was designed in August 1967 and manufactured in several Production-Runs from January to September 1968. The Machine is without any Doubt one of the absolute Masterpieces as well from Ted Zale as from Jerry K Kelley. Artist Jerry K Kelley told in a Conversation from 2000 that he and Designer Ted Zale had a very good Relationship and both of them liked the Idea for a Machine with a Rawhide-Theme featuring Dogies thundering through Canyons. So otherwise than Capersville for Example, a Design that was already finished by Ted Zale before Jerry Kelley joined Bally. The Test-Samples or maybe even just the Prototype(-s) had a green DOGIES Logo instead of the later known yellow one. As usual with Bally from 1964 to 1972 there were Models in english or german Language available. Sneaky Joe’ was a Joke from Artist Jerry K Kelley regarding a Bally-Executive. A very special “Gimmick” is hidden in the Backglass-Artwork. The 2 Women which appear on many Kelley-Machines – the “Wiggler-Woman” with her characteristic slinky long nose and her stern Face-Expression as well as the “Gator-Girl” with her rather thick Lips and big round Eyes – were indeed “the Blueprint” for the two Dogies on the left and on the right, following the leading Animal, directly facing the Player. Sadly, like each Bally-Machine from late’66 to late’68, it suffers from flaking Cabinet-Colors. This wasn’t due to bad/cheap Quality but due to a chemical Process. It became evident when the first Machines showed that Effect after 2 years, in late’68 (the first ones were BAZAAR and CAPERSVILLE). Newer Machines like COSMOS did not suffer anymore. At least half of the 3,670 Units went to Germany where it was very popular and is still easy to find there. Very sad is the Fact that, while many Americans would love to own a DOGIES, still some of them get converted by european V-Pin-Clowns. Important Terms of Sale – Please Read Carefully. The game has been fully described to the best of my ability and is in working order at the time it leaves my shop. Pinball machines are complex electromechanical devices and may require routine maintenance, adjustments, or minor repairs after transport.
1968 Bally Dogies Ultra Rare Pinball Machine Working FREE SHIPPING

1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine

1968-Bally-Dogies-4-Player-Pinball-Machine-01-lh 1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine
1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine
1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine
1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine
1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine
1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine

1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine
A Bally classic with zipper flippers. This hard to come by 4 player machine is a unique one. The Dogies Canyon in upper left playfield has three normally-closed gates that, when all are closed, route the ball across three rollover buttons to exit the Canyon near the bottom pop bumper which also lights the top two pop bumpers. Only one of these three normally-closed gates can be open at a time, as controlled by their corresponding mushroom bumpers located in mid-playfield. When open, these gates will detour the ball to remain inside the Canyon. When this happens, a long and inconspicuous fourth detour gate quickly and temporarily opens to block the entrance and route the ball to an otherwise inaccessible left drop lane (the Devil’s Canyon). In effect, hitting any of the lower three mushroom bumpers during play turns the Dogies Canyon into a large drop lane entrance so, if that happens, it is essential to first hit either of the two mushroom bumpers at top of playfield before entering the Canyon in order to activate a fifth detour gate in the drop lane to rescue the ball from draining. The playfield on this machine has been gone over and is ready to go! All new Rubber rings. All bad bulbs replaced. Playfield surface cleaned and waxed. Original back glass in great shape! The original cabinet is solid, however a previous owner painted it blue. Could be redone with original paint job, but leaving it won’t affect the game. Come check it out in Colts Neck, NJ.
1968 Bally Dogies 4 Player Pinball Machine