SOLD

This unit went to Vidiot Jeff in Binghamton. The base was glued, screwed and braced. David drove it to Robot City and Jeff is now a proud Gun Fighter.

Base


This unit is a bit short. 4 inches short to be precise. Gun Fight cabinets have a base that raises the cabinet up to a playable height. This unit is missing that base. It happens. Games get wet and the base absorbs all the damage. Dragging a game instead of using a hand truck can stress the base until it breaks.

Whatever the reason for the damage, operators found it easier to remove the base than repair it. I am a restorationist. I repair things like this.

I measured more than twice and cut some parts for a new base. I need to get them to the shop for glue and staples. I can paint it in the booth and get it back to attach to the game.

Yes, the front piece extends past the sides to present a nice, flawless front trim. The sides are the same, the back is smaller and the front has wings.

Burn Time


Burn test starts now. Everything is working fine just want to be sure the voltages do not rise and cook the boards.

Still to come:
  • Yellow Gel
  • New Base
  • Control Panel Tune Up

Swap Out

We check the harness and voltages. Everything looked pretty good. We fired it up and got garbage on the screen.

We swapped the existing boardset for a recently repaired set. Just for safety reasons, we swapped out the regulator board as well.

We fired it up and it looks great.

Acquisition


David grabbed a Gun Fight from a collector in Perth Amboy. The handle are the Boot Hill style, but the glass was in tact and we had some other cabinets to swap parts on.