I do wish somebody would tell operators that it's actually pretty easy to keep a pin in good functioning order... and that it might take a fair bit more money in that state too.
I'm sure the crazy prices pinballs are fetching has accelerated that process too.There's definitely a death spiral that these machines get into. The operator spends less money on maintenance because the pin is seen as a low-earning legacy item, things start breaking, and then it takes in even less money and the operator starts itching to unload it.
Pinball Hall of Fame in Vegas... I usually go a few times per month. As awesome as it is, there are still so many tables that I want to play that they just don't have.
I actually have several great options nearby:
Funworld (Ironman, AC/DC, Transformers @ 4 tokens for 3 plays)
Pinball Wizard Arcade (a literal pinball heaven with well-maintained machines)
Funspot (tons of classic pins)
I play at work!
You work in an arcade? Or do you have a table in the lunchroom?
Ventured out from London for some pinball action by the sea - what a depressing experience! Found a few tables, but every one of them had problems that made them pretty much unplayable. Fish Tales (broken DMD, weak flippers), Monster Bash (very weak flippers), Revenge from Mars (weak flippers, DMD faulty), Playboy (not working), Indiana Jones (weak flipper but just about playable), Addams Family (weak left flipper, multiball broken, ball gets jammed easily), RBION (broken DMD), Elvis (rubbers split on flippers so didn't bother) and Dr Who. Thank god for Pinball Arcade.