@janchapman1969a It's the old Schmidt pinsetting machine with a bunch of Brunswick electronics and add ons and enter the Brunswick GS pinsetters.....Some of which are pretty stupid....
Actually whoever designed the original GS-10 pinsetter it was built combining several pinsetters, distributor, pit/ball door, and table of an AMF, ball excelerator and pin distribution of a brunswick A-2, elevator of a candlepin machine, and chain driven system of a sherman duckpin machine. It seems he took the best parts of multiple machines and combined them to make the GS-10, which later became the GS-X
When the GS-10 pinsetter (5 models before the GS-X it was programable for manual scoring, therefore it would not do a second-ball detect, it would only do a sweep on second ball, this also could be used for the old-time Brunswick AS-80 automatic scoring. then in 1988, Brunswick came out with BowlerVision scoring which used the double detect, and now all Brunswick/GS- series scoring uses double detect
AMF-the best! Brunswick-sludge!
MrHunsler 4 days ago
I'll take a classic A2 over this complicated POS any day!
slyflight 4 months ago 2
that's stupid that the machine has to come down on the second cycle...
PahangDragonbird 10 months ago
@JklStudiosAwesome lol I know. The GS-series machines work pretty identical to how the newer AMFs do. Was just being sarcastic is all :P
heavyq 1 year ago
@heavyq they didn't AMF made them.
JklStudiosAwesome 1 year ago
@janchapman1969a It's the old Schmidt pinsetting machine with a bunch of Brunswick electronics and add ons and enter the Brunswick GS pinsetters.....Some of which are pretty stupid....
BIGGREENLEAF1 1 year ago
where's program number 2 for this?
Bubbled86 1 year ago
Actually whoever designed the original GS-10 pinsetter it was built combining several pinsetters, distributor, pit/ball door, and table of an AMF, ball excelerator and pin distribution of a brunswick A-2, elevator of a candlepin machine, and chain driven system of a sherman duckpin machine. It seems he took the best parts of multiple machines and combined them to make the GS-10, which later became the GS-X
janchapman1969a 1 year ago
When the GS-10 pinsetter (5 models before the GS-X it was programable for manual scoring, therefore it would not do a second-ball detect, it would only do a sweep on second ball, this also could be used for the old-time Brunswick AS-80 automatic scoring. then in 1988, Brunswick came out with BowlerVision scoring which used the double detect, and now all Brunswick/GS- series scoring uses double detect
janchapman1969a 1 year ago
9:23 please insert VHS casette now.. or... type in the youtube URL for the next video. HA
petershen1984 1 year ago