The last pinball Stern Electronics produced, released in 1982.
Only 889 units worldwide make this widebody game extremely rare.
In good working order.
See photos for details of actual machine for sale.
Notable Features:
Flippers (2), Spinning bumpers (2), Slingshots (2), Standup targets (8), 7-bank drop targets (1), 3-bank drop targets (2), Spinning target (1), Kick-out hole (1), 2-ball multiball, speech. Clear, contoured plastic playfield has a "moon surface"-like substrate. Playfield slopes down and in towards the spinning bumpers which fling the ball away. The playfield slopes behind the flippers, allowing balls to be flipped backwards and then rescued for a forward-flipping shot. The kick-out hole always traps the ball landing in it, until released for multiball.
Notes:
Rotating target bumpers add spin in addition to bounce, making the physics of the curved playfield difficult for the inexperienced Orbitor-1 player. Playfield is (smooth) molded Plexiglas, with the moonscape surface artwork suspended beneath it. The moonscape is lit from below by a fluorescent tube.
Drop all the targets in the two 3-target banks to advance bonus. Drop all the "Orbitor" targets and then hit all the Orbiter targets behind them to start multi-ball, or hit the captured ball hard and it'll bounce out and start multi-ball.
The backglass is made of a clear protective plastic cover and a rigid translite behind which are raised 3D features.
The flyer refers to the spinning bumpers as "revolving discs" and the manufacturer's parts list indicates these discs can spin either clockwise or counterclockwise, depending on which of two spinning motors is installed.
'Orbitor 1' was the last pinball machine produced by Stern Electronics. Ted Salveson wrote in his Coin Machine Trader (October 1982, page 2) that the last Orbitor 1 game shipped from the factory on August 10, 1982. Salveson wrote that, according to an authority from the factory, their suspension of pinball production would not be permanent. Salveson reasoned that video games would become their main interest.
Only 889 units worldwide make this widebody game extremely rare.
In good working order.
See photos for details of actual machine for sale.
Notable Features:
Flippers (2), Spinning bumpers (2), Slingshots (2), Standup targets (8), 7-bank drop targets (1), 3-bank drop targets (2), Spinning target (1), Kick-out hole (1), 2-ball multiball, speech. Clear, contoured plastic playfield has a "moon surface"-like substrate. Playfield slopes down and in towards the spinning bumpers which fling the ball away. The playfield slopes behind the flippers, allowing balls to be flipped backwards and then rescued for a forward-flipping shot. The kick-out hole always traps the ball landing in it, until released for multiball.
Notes:
Rotating target bumpers add spin in addition to bounce, making the physics of the curved playfield difficult for the inexperienced Orbitor-1 player. Playfield is (smooth) molded Plexiglas, with the moonscape surface artwork suspended beneath it. The moonscape is lit from below by a fluorescent tube.
Drop all the targets in the two 3-target banks to advance bonus. Drop all the "Orbitor" targets and then hit all the Orbiter targets behind them to start multi-ball, or hit the captured ball hard and it'll bounce out and start multi-ball.
The backglass is made of a clear protective plastic cover and a rigid translite behind which are raised 3D features.
The flyer refers to the spinning bumpers as "revolving discs" and the manufacturer's parts list indicates these discs can spin either clockwise or counterclockwise, depending on which of two spinning motors is installed.
'Orbitor 1' was the last pinball machine produced by Stern Electronics. Ted Salveson wrote in his Coin Machine Trader (October 1982, page 2) that the last Orbitor 1 game shipped from the factory on August 10, 1982. Salveson wrote that, according to an authority from the factory, their suspension of pinball production would not be permanent. Salveson reasoned that video games would become their main interest.