I know I know, some of you more experienced players might be tired of explaning how these work, but if someones got a spare few mins and wouldn't mind giving me a detailed description of how you can use it to your advantage, i'd really appreciate it.
For example, last week I put it in pots of gold and when holding down start, it said 1 X 143. Now what do these figures mean? The left side figure is always 1 right? But what does the second side figure mean?
I assume the further away the second figure from the 1 is, the better chance you have of winning as this machine payed out 45quid after 15quid in just after I did this, whereas when ive used it on a machine before the number was way lower and it just kept taking money
Refill key instructions
Re: Refill key instructions
Eeeeek!mr2nut wrote:I assume the further away the second figure from the 1 is, the better chance you have of winning ...
Er, no. Quite the opposite.
1PD = 143.00
1 x 143
£1 x 143
Refill * 143
All of the above examples (from different cabinets) are telling you that the hopper is £143 away from being full, which is of course BAD NEWS (in most circumstances).
This machine may at times offer a choice where the player has every chance of bankruptcy
Its how many coins are needed to refill the hopper. Hence the key being called a refill Key. However theyre becoming less & less useful.
For Instance your machine was £143 off but still paid out because :
1. It may not be refilled and has been drained of coins with lots of notes going in.
2. A lot of small pubs only have the machines half floated so it's £125 off before anyone has touched it.
For Instance your machine was £143 off but still paid out because :
1. It may not be refilled and has been drained of coins with lots of notes going in.
2. A lot of small pubs only have the machines half floated so it's £125 off before anyone has touched it.
betchrider wrote:You go upto a bird and grab her quim and say "im gonna knock the fuck outta this" and see what happens
Yes i've heard it varies from between manufacturers, some show what's left to fill and some show the balance, i'm not quite sure which is which, you could always key it, then put in a quid and try again then you'd know either way, here's a guide i found.