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Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2
Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2








Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2
  1. DOWNLOAD BRUNSWICK PINSETTER MANUAL A2 FULL
  2. DOWNLOAD BRUNSWICK PINSETTER MANUAL A2 SERIES

  • Pin turret (Brunswick A series only) - One form of 'pin storage' used by Brunswick's Model A-series tenpin pinspotters (A/A2/JetBack) and emulated in part, by a few manufacturers.
  • Above-lane ball returns remained in use today as a low-cost alternative for miniature arcade bowling lanes, which use scaled-down balls and pins. The ball return track is normally located below the lane, although earlier pinsetters (both mechanical and automatic) has above-lane tracks, similar to that of older manual lanes. The ball lift's components are designed to physically separate the ball from the fallen pins in the pit, and will not send pins into the ball return track.
  • Ball return – Removes the bowler's ball from the lane's 'pit' and sends it rolling back to the bowler on the ball return track, located between paired lane beds, back to the ball return unit at the 'heads' of the lanes.
  • DOWNLOAD BRUNSWICK PINSETTER MANUAL A2 FULL

    A system of pin storage for storing the next full 'rack' of pins after delivery to it by the pin elevator system – this can exist within (or as part of) the table, or above and/or behind the table.

    Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2

  • Pin elevator – brings pins upwards out of the lane's pit to the top of the unit for re-setting for successive frames, usually in the form of a vertically-oriented toroid-shape system at the extreme rear of the pinspotter for tenpin bowling units, to deliver pins upwards from the pit into the pin storage system.
  • Pit – a collection area behind the lane where balls and struck pins collect for sorting, a part of any regulation bowling lane.
  • Deck (Brunswick A series only) – a fixed sheet metal enclosure, usually fastened to the spotting table's framework and diagonal forward frame edges, provides secondary protection for the spotting table system from improperly thrown balls (in addition to the sweep bar) and flying pins, and covers the pin chutes that are used to transfer the pins from the characteristic, cage-like Brunswick-design rotating pin storage turret above the table downwards into the deck for transfer onto the lane's pin deck area.
  • Table – also used in pre-automated manual units (often, as their sole mechanical device) places the pins onto the lane for the next frame and lifts the remaining pins for the sweep bar to remove fallen pins for the bowler's next roll.
  • In most pinsetters, the sweep bar is triggered as soon as the ball enters the pit, usually via an optical sensor that detects the ball motion. The sweep bar may also stay lowered throughout the pinsetter operating cycle, to act as the primary physical protective barrier against improperly thrown balls.

    Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2

  • Sweep bar – removes fallen and leftover pins from the pin deck.
  • Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2

    Common part descriptions for just about all pinspotting units consist of: Several types of bowling make use of different designs for machines due to the different size and shape of the pins and balls. The design of the machines varies, depending both in individual company's hardware designs, and for the particular bowling sport's playing rules and equipment specifications.










    Download Brunswick Pinsetter Manual A2