Wow! This is a spectacular jaw-dropping multi-million dollar collection of antique mechanical slot machines and trade stimulators on display. 1:49 The Charles Fey Liberty Bell 3-reel slot machine is the Holy Grail of antique 3-reel slot machines. This machine alone is a king’s ransom - valued at over a quarter of a million dollars. There are less than five of these machines in the world today. 😲
Thanks for your message... I do not know much about the machine. The manufacturer of this clever coin drop game is unknown and it's circa 1930ish. Guessing this is a Europe version and not American.
You use old coins as well for the mechanical gambling devices? I saw (Indian) Buffalo Nickels at 4:29. (Make sure none of them are worth a lot of money before sticking them in their coin slots.)
Barry, first off thank you for this video. Can you please identify the coin-drop machine at 1:06? It has the eagle with the american flag colors at the top. you see these kinds of machine all across Europe from the 20s-70s, but I'm curious to know that there might be an American version!
WOW, THIS IS NOT A JAW DROPPING COLLECTION IT'S A BODY DROPPING COLLECTION, ABSOLUTELY OUT OF THIS WORLD, BEAUTIFUL!!!!!
Wow! This is a spectacular jaw-dropping multi-million dollar collection of antique mechanical slot machines and trade stimulators on display. 1:49 The Charles Fey Liberty Bell 3-reel slot machine is the Holy Grail of antique 3-reel slot machines. This machine alone is a king’s ransom - valued at over a quarter of a million dollars. There are less than five of these machines in the world today. 😲
CHARLES IS SMILING DOWN AT THIS COLLECTION!
I enjoyed watching this video...! a beautiful collection and takes me back to my childhood.
Congratulations on your amazing collection and it looks like all the machines are working
I randomly bought 6 machines from an auction that came from this collection. Kind of sad to break up such an amazing collection
Looking foward for more of your videos, Mr Goldfarb.
Amazing I would love your hobby! . I work with modern day machines but nothing beats the old machine look and noise. Great video please do more.
These machines should be in a “slot machine museum.” That way the whole world could enjoy them. Perhaps located in downtown Las Vegas.
I have 5 machines from Barry's collection across the pond in the UK!
Amazing collection!!!
Why is it only old guys (and I am one) like to collect vintage slot machines, Gum-ball machines, Edison phonographs, etc.?
Barry.......if your out there???........I would love the ''poison this rat'' machine :}
Thanks for your message... I do not know much about the machine. The manufacturer of this clever coin drop game is unknown and it's circa 1930ish. Guessing this is a Europe version and not American.
Way cool!
You use old coins as well for the mechanical gambling devices? I saw (Indian) Buffalo Nickels at 4:29. (Make sure none of them are worth a lot of money before sticking them in their coin slots.)
Barry, first off thank you for this video. Can you please identify the coin-drop machine at 1:06? It has the eagle with the american flag colors at the top. you see these kinds of machine all across Europe from the 20s-70s, but I'm curious to know that there might be an American version!
queste macchine valgono non so quanti soldi
please correct the name in my last comment ...Al-Capone
how are you reachable? I left my contact details
Barry Goldfarb...call me
I assure my collection is bigger, I live in Amsterdam The Netherlands , I am reachable at 0031633082268 0r email stsn@hotmail.com
@@amarrasheed5964 Must be beyond HUGE!!!!