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Star Trek pinball machine

Collector Value Est.

$1,000–$1,800

USD · Market estimate

Near-mint / restored. Worn or stored examples sell for 30–60% less.

DemandModerate
Rarity15/100
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Bally · 1979

Star Trek

Notable Features

Flippers (2) Pop bumpers (3), Slingshots (2), 4-bank drop targets (1), Standup targets (5), Star rollovers (2), Kick-out hole (1), Free ball return lane.

1979
Year
16,842
Produced
4
Players
Specifications
Manufacturer
Bally
Year Released
1979
Type
SS
Display
alphanumeric
MPU
Bally MPU AS-2518-35
Model #
1148-E
Units Produced
16,842
Players
4
Credits
Design
Gary Gayton
Art
Kevin O'Connor

Historical Notes

'Star Trek' began as an American science fiction TV series which ran from 1966 to 1969. It was canceled due to low ratings. In syndication, the series' episodes enjoyed a renewed and sustained following which eventually led to a 1979 Hollywood movie of the same name, the first of six movies using the same actors from this TV show. Early versions of the backglass showed the Enterprise crew dressed in the uniforms from the TV series. To promote the Hollywood movie that was coming out at the same time as this game, the backglass art was changed early in the production run to show them dressed in single-color clothing. In addition, two playfield plastics were changed to feature the bald-headed woman from this first movie. These Early Production "TV version" backglasses have a large white trademark symbol (TM) after the name. Artist Kevin O'Connor's signature is also shown in white. The modified "movie version" glass has a smaller TM in a black color, the artist's name is shown in red, and in the lower right corner is additional license and trademark text not found on the TV version. Also pictured in this listing is a third version of backglass made by Bally but did not appear on any game. It is identical to the movie version except it has no TM after the name. Also, it has no adhesive "Credit" sticker in the credit window. It was one of approximately 25-30 glasses that were obtained many years ago from a man who owned a warehouse that was used by Bally. We believe these glasses were considered flawed for lack of the trademark symbol and were set aside by Bally, not to be used on any machine. According to artist Kevin O'Connor, the original backglass art had the character on the left shooting a humanoid, but that had to be changed to a ball of energy due to demands by the show's producers that no one be shown being killed. The humanoid can be seen on the original backglass artwork shown in the book Pinball Art.

Where to Play It

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