spiroagnew's WMS Pharaoh
I’m glad this one was for my own personal collection, and not for someone else, because it gave me fits and took me way longer than it should have. I apologize for the long post up front.
I bought this Pharaoh about a year ago off of MAACA. I’ve acquired a new BG Resto backglass and will be experimenting with adding an Outside Edge Hardtop to the game, as the mylar lifted quite a bit of the artwork off of the playfield during teardown.
The game is one of Williams’ tetralogy of dual level games along with Solar Fire, Black Knight and Jungle Lord. The very first game I ever owned in the hobby was a Solar Fire, and I’d like to own a nice copy of each of these games at some point, even though I much prefer Bally and Stern games from this era. I’m partial to Pharaoh though, the theme, the artwork, the speech, the gameplay…I think it’s the best of Williams “fantastic four” (and that’s highly debatable point, I know).
I offered to capture the cabinet artwork for the Pinball Pimp, so that
he could add Pharaoh to his lineup of stencils, and in turn I was able to acquire a set to use in this restoration. There were actually two different versions of the coin door cabinet art: one seemed rushed and uninspired on early copies of the game, and the other was more fleshed out on later copies. The yellow colour used seems to differ on the two versions as well. The yellow on the earlier games matches that of a lighter yellow used on Black Knight, the later games used a more orange-y tone. My game had the earlier artwork with the brighter yellow, but the Pinball Pimp recreated the better looking artwork for his stencils.
It is also interesting to note that when I aquired the game, I saw a faint outline edges of a different stencil that looked to be painted over on the head of the cab. I identified this as the artwork for Black Knight. Sure enough, when I was stripping the Pharaoh paint off of the head, it revealed the Black Knight artwork underneith that had been painted over. This was certianly a factory coverup. They must have had a few BK heads lying around at the end of the BK run and at the beginning of the Pharaoh run. The main cab didn't have any cover-ups--it was a Pharaoh original. It's quite fitting to find this kind of archeology on a Pharaoh cabinet, isn't it?
I usually subscribe to the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” mentality, but I’m ashamed to say I strayed for this project. Instead of using the tested and true Molotow rattlecan paint, I thought I’d give the game a high gloss look, and I went with the Krylon brand of rattlecan paints. The Pinball Pimp recommends using Krylon or Rustoleum rattlecans, so I thought, why not? Further, the brand had a deep red and a yellowy-orange in gloss that matched well, to lay onto of their standard gloss black.
The cabinet was stripped, sanded and primed using my regular methods. The black base was applied with little issue, but I did find that it wasn’t drying well. I gave it a week to cure, putting it outside on warm breezy days. When it came time to lay down the first yellow layer, I had multiple instances of the paint “crinkling”. It just so happened that there was a
Pinside thread where a collector was having the same problem with Rustoleum paint. There are a few reasons why this may have happened: one of the layers wasn’t completely dry, the solvents reacted badly, weather conditions prevented proper adhesion, etc. The bottom line was, the yellow layer was ruined in a few spots, and I had no choice to strip the cabinet down and start all over again. To make matters worse, I had used up the yellow layer of Pinball Pimp stencils which are one-time use.
(From the Pinside thread mentioned, here's an instance of what was happening, except it was on my stencil layer, this one is on the base layer.)
I took a tracing of the yellow layer and decided to cut my own stencils instead of hassling the Pinball Pimp for another partial set (and paying for them). I also decided to go back to the Molotow brand of paint. I usually source the paint locally, but I was now told that the Molotow spray has been recalled due to it not meeting Environment Canada standards. Just another setback. Luckily, Bombing Science in Quebec had the paint readily available to ship to me, at a great price, with a further 10% discount, free shipping, and a massive colour palate from the Molotow line to choose from. Bombing Science either didn’t bother to acknowledge the recall, or they are shipping paint that now conforms to standards.
With the stencils cut and the new paint in-hand, I banged out the project with no other hiccups. Well, there was one hiccup…the Pinball Pimp stencil had one area where it wasn’t weeded properly. Check out the difference in the Pharaoh’s rear arm—one is filled and one isn’t. I’ll probably leave this slight difference that nobody will notice to remind me of all the trouble I went through to paint this damn cab.
Pictures to follow in the next post...