Archive for Tunica Forum - Tunica Gambling Forum - Free discussion forum for Tunica Mississippi Tunica MS, Biloxi MS, Las Vegas and everywhere else! Contests, promotions and drawings!
 



       Tunica Forum - Forum Index -> Casino Chat
Brianzz

Coin machines coming back to AC

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — It used to be the signature sound of gambling: the clacking of coins spilling into metal trays on slot machines. But newer electronic machines that spit paper vouchers or credit winnings to cards now emit only canned noise.

Now Atlantic City's oldest casino is bringing back the real clang amid indications that some gamblers miss the way things used to be.

"You think you're playing a real slot machine here," said Jeanette Snell of Union, who won two $25 jackpots less than five minutes after she started playing Friday at Resorts Atlantic City. "This feels like a game; the other ones, it's just losing money."

She cashed out soon afterward, enjoying the clacking sound as 47 $1 coins spilled into a metal tray at the bottom of her machine. She grabbed an oversized plastic cup — they used to be EVERYWHERE in Atlantic City casinos — and scooped up her winnings.

"This is real money!" she said. "I like this better."

Resorts is banking on others liking it, too. It became the nation's first legal casino outside Las Vegas when it opened in 1978 and has since seen more than 14,000 slot machines come and go.

Its coin experiment is definitely swimming against the tide in the casino industry, where nearly 90 percent of the 900,000 or so slot machines in use in north America do not accept or pay out in coins. None of Atlantic City's 33,010 other slot machines use coins, though a small handful use tokens for high-denomination bets.

The trend accelerated in 2003 when the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa opened in Atlantic City as the resort's first coinless casino. Casinos liked the fact that the new machines didn't jam nearly as often, had to be maintained far less, and best of all, required fewer employees. No longer was it necessary to pay workers to stock machines with coins, transport them to or from cash cages, count and roll them.

"It's very time-consuming and costly to run coins," said Christopher Downey, Resorts' director of slot operations. "As soon as this technology became available, the industry grabbed onto it."

Resorts opened eight of the coin machines this week, and will add others if they catch on. The casino, with one of the oldest customer bases in Atlantic City, has been doing well with a nightclub called "Boogie Nights," where '70s disco rules.

They used the "Boogie Nights" retro theme for the slot machines as part of a deliberate appeal to older players.

Some of them gamble at the Skyline Restaurant and Casino in Henderson, Nev., where half of the 420 slot machines use coins. Those machines generate about 15 percent more revenue than do the paper voucher ones, said general manager Mike Young.

"It fills a niche, particularly for the older player," he said. "They just love the coins. They like to get their hands dirty, they like to cash out, they like to hear the money drop into the trays."

Nonetheless, coinless slots are the future of the industry, said Ed Rogich, vice president of IGT, a leading slot machine manufacturer.

"There was that casual player who liked the sound of the coins and being able to handle them and the sound of hearing the coins clinking into the tray," he said. "But today that's been replaced by flat-screen TV panels or LCD panels of fireworks and celebratory noises, and people like that, too."





http://www.newsday.com/news/natio...oin-slot-machines,0,3363570.story
ontheopenroad

I have to admit, I miss the coins and the noise.  I loved the quarter slots.  Though I don't miss the dirty hands and lugging around the big cups.
WILynn

I miss the noise sometimes, and the dropping a couple coins in a machine every now and then, but, like Jim, I don't miss the dirty hands and lugging the heavy coin buckets around.  Or waiting for a $50 hand pay on a nickel machine.
Jean

I missed the sound of the coins dropping at first, but I also don't miss hauling or racking the coins.
What I do miss is the machines that you sit down at and they make no noise whatsoever.  I'm not saying I want to be blasted off my seat, but a nice little sound to let you know the darn thing is spinning or something is nice.
LA

I don't miss the nasty mess from coins, but it was nice to hear them clanking in the tray, especially the dollars one.  

Jean, I'm with you. I like to hear the machine speaking to me while I'm playing it. When you got on one that is totally silent it's almost like it's dead, and you know it isn't going to pay you anything.
LunaToon

I kinda miss the coin machines too.  One of our favorite things to do after playing VP for hours, was to take $20 in dollar tokens and bop around from slot machine to slot machine ploping in a coin or two here and there before going to bed.  Sometimes we hit some good jackpots, $100-$400 which made it all the better because you'd go to bed on a high note but if you lost your $20 in tokens, no big deal.  

Somehow shoving a $20 bill in a machine just didn't have the same sense of fun.  However I do agree about the buckets of coins and the filthy hands were a major head ache.  Maybe they could make coins an option..........Ticket OR Coins!  Best of both worlds.

Cheers
LunaToon

       Tunica Forum - Forum Index -> Casino Chat
Page 1 of 1
Create your own free forum | Buy a domain to use with your forum
Secure web hosting|Debt Consolidation|Submit articleFree Movies|Debt Consolidation|Deaf Topics