Boots – shoes – and leggings
Patent
1992-07-21
1995-02-14
Voeltz, Emanuel T.
Boots, shoes, and leggings
364411, 32420711, 324219, 273239, A63F 738
Patent
active
053901096
DESCRIPTION:
BRIEF SUMMARY
TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to a sensor for detecting the location of a metal body. More particularly, it relates to a sensor which is suitable for detecting the location of a metal body within, for example, a space held between parallel planes.
BACKGROUND ART
Apparatuses which need to have a sensor for detecting the location of a metal body are, for example, metal detectors, game machines and so on. By way of example, some of the game machines are such that a metal body, e.g., a metal ball is moved within a specified space which has been set in the game machine, and that whether or not a prize is won is determined in accordance with the movement of the ball. A typical example of such a game machine is, for example, a "pachinko" (Japanese upright pinball) game machine with which a game player causes a metal "pachinko" ball to move down within a space held between parallel planes and provided with a large number of obstacles.
The "pachinko" game machine has a panel which defines the space for moving the "pachinko" ball, a glass plate which covers the panel at a fixed interval therefrom, and a projectile mechanism which functions to project the "pachinko" ball to the upper part of the panel. The "pachinko" game machine is so installed that the panel extends substantially in the vertical direction. The panel is formed with a plurality of safe holes each of which serves to make a hit when the "pachinko" ball has been led thereinto and driven out of the panel, and a single out hole into which the "pachinko" balls having failed to enter the safe holes are finally gathered to be driven out of the panel. Besides, a large number of pins (or nails) are planted as obstacles on the panel substantially perpendicularly thereto in the state in which they protrude from the panel to a distance corresponding to the diameter of each "pachinko" ball, in order that the "pachinko" ball falling along the panel may frequently collide against the pins to have its moving direction altered. The pins are arranged on the panel in a predetermined distribution in which, while altering the moving direction of the colliding "pachinko" ball, they lead this ball so as to proceed toward the safe hole in some cases and to miss the safe hole in other cases.
Owing to the construction as stated above, the "pachinko" game machines come to have individualities such as a machine in which it is easy to register hits and a machine in which it is difficult to register hits, depending upon the slight differences of the respective machines in the arrangement and inclinations of the pins. Even identical machines involve such differences as having safe holes with a high hit rate and safe holes with a low hit rate. Moreover, the differences are variously discrepant among the machines.
In a game center or the like wherein the game machines of this type are installed in large numbers, to know the individualities of the respective game machines is important for management in relation to the profit administration and customer administration of the game center. By way of example, when many of the machines register hits excessively, the game center side suffers a loss, whereas when all the machines are difficult to register hits on, customers become disinterested, which is unfavorable to business. Accordingly, countermeasures need to be taken by knowing the individualities of the respective game machines which are installed in the center.
For such a purpose, it is practised to detect the moving courses of the "pachinko" balls in the "pachinko" game machine. In the official gazette of Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 3506/1989, for example, there is disclosed as a sensor for such a purpose an apparatus equipped with an upper sheet and a lower sheet which have a pair of contacts. This technique senses the existence of the "pachinko" ball in such a way that the "pachinko" ball gets on the upper sheet and depresses it, whereby the pair of contacts come into touch.
With the prior-art sensor, however, since the sheets have the pairs of
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Handa Shigeru
Kawashima Kazunari
Takemoto Takatoshi
Kabushiki Kaisha Ace Denken
Miller Craig
Voeltz Emanuel T.
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