Evolution of Brunswick automatic pinsetters (www.oldbowling.com)

Complete videos available from www.oldbowling.com * Pinboys using spikes to set pins * B-1 semi-automatic pinsetter * 1920′s automatic pinsetter * Prototype Model A pinsetter
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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25 Responses to Evolution of Brunswick automatic pinsetters (www.oldbowling.com)

  1. bigalz420 says:

    @red7pin so he throws a reverse curve, alot of people bowl like that u dirty nigger, fuck you

  2. janchapman1969a says:

    @red7pin – sorry, it is normal for a lefty to attempt this spare from the right

  3. rivierarick says:

    Interesting that these had features the wouldn’t get public until AMF came out with the ACCU-SCORE chassis in the 80′s

  4. DSnWiiRocks says:

    @red7pin if he hook the ball?

  5. BIGGREENLEAF1 says:

    The problem for early pinsetter designers for years was not the setting or loading of a new rack or returning the ball but was the picking up and respotting of the pins after the first ball. That issue had stymied designers for close to 40 years…

  6. BIGGREENLEAF1 says:

    @uberbcs Brunswick responded with the model A machine as the A-2 wouldn’t come about for a few years later around the time the AMF was getting ready to launch their second machine the 82-70 A machine the had the roll over bin and the first 82-70 machine nearly put AMF out of business because it was so bad, the redesign of the bin and distributor just in the nick of time saved them…

  7. slb785 says:

    @Predatorocks I work on both brunswick A-2s and AMF 82-70s. (mostly amf). And know that only the AMF is capable of cycling like that. And as for the rake/sweep. The AMF sweep is actually VERY durable. Ive seen them get blasted with a 15lb ball and they hold up well. Working full time at my job in the AMF house i havent seen a sweep bar broken in years

  8. Predatorocks says:

    @slb785 I don’t think I’ve ever seen that either, but maybe it has to do with not many people getting a gutter on the first shot, and people seeing it a lot less.

    I find it funny how that one machine has 2 guard things. The ones they use today for the guards just look so flimsy like they would break easily if you throw a rocket of a bowling ball down the alley.

  9. ke3wh says:

    @EdmDude didnt seem to be that way to me, but my eyes suck now days

  10. Schmicko007 says:

    actually, all the pinsetters in the gs-series have that function, they do the same thing if you only hit a 7 or 10 pin on the first ball

  11. slb785 says:

    that last feature with a gutterball is something ive never seen on a modern day brunswick machine. I know AMF machines can do it with the right scoring system

  12. cwf1701 says:

    early concepts. sometimes the prototype might get rejected because of cost (in the 1920/30s some public bowling alleys in Detroit MI was as small as 4-6 lanes (anything over 12-16 lanes at the time was large), which would make the machines money-losers). sometimes the machine might be too complex to work on, etc.

  13. stannous says:

    The second pinsetter looks like an A-2, or an early version of it. The first one doesn’t look like any Brunswick or AMF machine I have seen.

  14. red7pin says:

    Did anyone catch at 2:39 the guy bowling is left handed and the next shot comes in from the right.LOL nice try guys…

  15. RiversHDS says:

    yep. i guess he hitted the pin, that was allready down & behind the land :)

  16. SonicBowl says:

    the concepts from brunswick are very good

  17. Retrobowler says:

    DID any body see the ball bounce 3:07 to 3:20

  18. vitaphonedisc says:

    The second pinsetter appears to be a very old prototype dating to the 1920′s. It seems that they just dressed up some old prototypes, and slapped them behind new masking units. The fact being that AMF beat them to the punch in automatics. I am sure they were really scrambling to show “something” to the nervous customer base. The second machine in the video was patented on November 20, 1928 by J.W. Bishop. Patent number 1,692,796.

  19. uberbcs says:

    Err, not the A-2, but rather the A… same thing though :P

  20. uberbcs says:

    Brunswick had the first semi-automatic pinsetter, but AMF had the first automatic pinspotter with the 82-30. Brunswick responded to this competition with the A-2.

  21. HGJYBRANDON says:

    hey what is a prototype pinsetter

  22. HGJYBRANDON says:

    haha yep

  23. EdmDude says:

    yeah, cool looking GS-type sweep. I guess history repeats itself.

  24. HGJYBRANDON says:

    omgosh i found something! guess what you know the first pinsetter (automatic) if u notice the sweep thing is just like the gs-x series of pinsetters omgosh

  25. HGJYBRANDON says:

    hey can u put more of theses things on you tube if u can