Time Tunnel

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Time Tunnel Game Info

The Time Tunnel pinball machine, developed by Bally in 1971, was an ambitious electro-mechanical game designed by Jim Patla with art by Christian Marche. However, the machine never saw full production due to a copyright conflict with the "Time Tunnel" TV show. Only 70 units were produced before it was rebranded and redesigned as Space Time and later Time Zone

Time Tunnel is a pinball machine manufactured by Bally Manufacturing Co. in 1971. Design by Jim Patla. Art by Christian Marche. Animation by Jim Patla.
Primary manufacturer:
Bally Manufacturing Co.
Year:
1971
Preferred Dealer:
Flip N Out Pinball
IPDB
OPDB Group ID:
rXZE
Remake manufacturer:
Other manufacturer:
Game type:
Electro-Mechanical
Display type:
Reels
Players:
4
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Time Tunnel Photos

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Time Tunnel Design Team

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Time Tunnel Rules

Quickie Version:

Stop the tunnel on the 5000 value, then shoot the collect tunnel center standup all day.

Go-to Flipper:

Balanced

Risk Index:

Very High

Full Rules:

This was the original version of Space Time. Just one problem: there was a “Time Tunnel” TV show I watched in the 1960’s, and Bally didn’t check first for licensing rights. Oops! Bally had to rename the game. Along the way, they made a few changes before starting production on the revised model. The primary differences between this and Space Time / Time Zone are the absence of the center post between the flippers and having only one pair of bumpers up top. The tunnel in Time Tunnel was positioned in the center of the playfield between where the lower bumpers are now, rather than underneath the playfield just above the flippers. The skill shot is the collect tunnel lane at the top, but you need to time your plunge so that the tunnel is lit for 5000 when you collect it. The tunnel cycles through values of 1000 to 5000 [look down at the tunnel, you’ll see it], stopping when the ball hits the “stop tunnel” switch near the top of the plunger lane. You can try to soft plunge just up to the stop switch first, then go for the collect plunge after that, but I’ve found it’s harder to accurately time a soft plunge than the near-full plunge that gets the center collect lane. If you do the one-step near-full plunge, line up the plunger on the right spot on the plunge markers first, then time your release while watching the tunnel lights cycling below. Once the ball is in play, your goal is simple: shoot the center red standup target all day to collect tunnel value so long as the value is 3000 or more. If the tunnel is on 1000 or 2000, you’re usually better off shooting the ball towards the gate, if open, the collect bonus on the left [which shoots the ball back up top], or just shooting the ball up top towards the “start tunnel” saucers to change it. If your plunge fell into one of the start tunnel saucers, or the ball got there after rattling around in the bumpers, the tunnel value will stop again when you hit that center target, or when the ball goes into the “collect tunnel” pocket on the left side. The lack of a center post dramatically changes how the game plays. Whereas on Space Time you want to raise the post, get the ball to settle between it and a flipper, and repeatedly shoot the center collect tunnel standup target, that’s not possible here. For one thing, shooting that center collect standup with no center post means a high risk of a center drain! The machine is now more of a flow game where the strategy is UTAD. Your safest chance of collecting the tunnel is now through random bounces into either the top saucer or either side chute. The two gates are more useful here than on Space Time, too, since they score both points and collect tunnel; shoot or nudge the ball through them whenever you can. Each of the two top saucers opens one of the gates. While you can use the two “start tunnel” standup targets to the side of the center collect target to change the tunnel value, the rebounds off of those targets can be really risky, so I’d avoid them. When you compare Time Tunnel with Space Time / Time Zone, you find that the addition of the center post makes the game much more skill-based. In this case, Bally’s error was a fortunate thing since it led to the creation of a better game. If you run across a Time Tunnel machine, please let me know where it is!

via Bob's Guide

How to Play Time Tunnel

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Time Tunnel Gameplay Video

Gameplay Discussion & History

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