When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: lego bowling pinsetter

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pinsetter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinsetter

    A 5-pin bowling pinsetter in use at a bowling alley in Toronto Pinsetters in operation at a bowling alley as seen from behind the lanes. In bowling, a pinsetter or pinspotter is an automated mechanical device that sets bowling pins back in their original positions, returns bowling balls to the front of the alley, and clears fallen pins on the pin deck.

  3. Automatic scorer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_scorer

    Inside 1970s computer console apparatus. Automatic equipment is considered a cornerstone of the modern bowling center. The traditional bowling center of the early 20th century was advanced in automation when the pinsetter person ("pin boy"), who set back up by hand the bowled down pins, [1] was replaced by a machine that automatically replaced the pins in their proper play positions.

  4. QubicaAMF Worldwide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QubicaAMF_Worldwide

    In 2003 Qubica acquired the Mendes company, a maker of pinsetters, ball returns, and automated scoring systems. [ 3 ] QubicaAMF Worldwide was formed in July 2005 when AMF Bowling Worldwide contributed the assets of its Bowling Products Division and Qubica Lux S.à r.l. (successor owner of Qubica) contributed Qubica S.p.A. to a new joint venture ...

  5. File:19560731 Bowling pin-setting mechanism - U. S. Patent ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:19560731_Bowling_pin...

    English: Assembled clippings from U. S. Patent 2,757,000, "Bowling pin-setting mechanism", including Figure 2, altered by uploader to highlight candlepins in blue. Date 31 July 1956

  6. Brunswick Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunswick_Corporation

    In 1949, the Brunswick "Model A" Mechanical Pinsetter fully automated unit premiered, for the purpose of handling bowling pins for ten-pin bowling, in competition with American Machine and Foundry (AMF). Previously, Brunswick had made two models of semi-automated, manually operated "spotting tables" for the tenpin sport, that the "Model A" unit ...

  7. Bowling pin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowling_pin

    Scale diagram of bowling pins and balls for several variants of the sport. The horizontal blue lines are 1 inch (2.5 cm) apart vertically. Bowling pins (historically also known as skittles or kegels) are upright elongated solids of rotation with a flat base for setting, usually made of wood (esp. maple) standing between 9 and 16 inches (23 and 41cm) tall.

  8. AMF Bowling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMF_Bowling

    A typical US AMF-branded bowling center that uses AMF pinsetters. At the formation of AMF Bowling in 1986, Commonwealth Ventures acquired the 110 AMF-owned bowling centers in the United States and abroad, as well as the 22 centers owned by one of the partners in Commonwealth Ventures, Major League Bowling Corp. Commonwealth then spent nearly $500 million revitalizing the bowling center ...

  9. Candlepin bowling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlepin_bowling

    A bowling alley in Windsor, Vermont, United States, in about 1910. Tenpins and duckpins are stored on a shelf behind the pit areas, suggesting that the same bowling lanes were used by the different variations of the sport. A drawing from a 1956 patent issued to the inventors of the first automated candlepin pinsetter. (Blue shading not in ...