Playfield equipment consists of two flippers, two slingshots, three pop bumpers, drop targets, and a kick-out hole. This example was among the earliest solid-state models produced by the company and features images of Evel Knievel in costume with his stunt motorcycles. In 1977 Bally Manufacturing began offering “solid-state” pinball machines and marketed them as being more reliable and more profitable than their electromechanical counterparts. This Evel Knievel pinball machine was purchased by the seller approximately 13 years ago and is now offered at no reserve with manufacturer’s literature and schematics in Portland, Oregon. Service under current ownership reportedly involved replacing a circuit board and a flipper relay. The cabinet is outfitted with a glass playfield cover, digital score displays, three coin slots, mechanical chimes, and a tilt sensor. The four-player machine features a back panel and playfield with Evel Knievel imagery along with red, white, and blue graphics, flippers, slingshots, pop bumpers, and drop targets. This Bally pinball machine is one of approximately 14,000 Evel Knievel-themed models produced by Bally Manufacturing of Chicago, Illinois, in the late-1970s.
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