The present invention relates generally to gaming machines and, more particularly, to a floating bezel for a peripheral component in a gaming machine.
Many gaming machines contain a bill acceptor (i.e., bill validator) that draws in and reads currency bills inserted therein by a player. The bill acceptor includes an entry end with an entry slot for receiving the inserted bills. If an inserted bill is determined to be valid, the bill acceptor accepts the bill and delivers it to a cassette that stores the accepted bills. If, however, an inserted bill is determined to be invalid, the bill acceptor rejects the bill by dispensing it from the bill acceptor. The gaming machine increments its credit meter by a number of credits corresponding to the value of an accepted bill. For example, on a “quarter” machine where each wagered credit is worth one quarter, the gaming machine increments its credit meter by four credits for each accepted dollar bill, by twenty credits for each accepted five dollar bill, by forty credits for each accepted ten dollar bill, and so on.
A bill acceptor is mounted inside a housing of the gaming machine at a mounting location. The housing includes a front door having an opening that exposes the entry slot at the entry end of the bill acceptor. In some assemblies, the bill acceptor may be mounted so deep within the machine housing that a gap exists between the front door and the entry end of the bill acceptor. To bridge this gap, a separate bezel is fixedly mounted to the front door and extends between the front door and the entry end of the bill acceptor when the door is closed.
A drawback of the above assembly is that the bezel and the entry end of the bill acceptor may be misaligned or become misaligned. Such misalignment may be caused by such factors as variances in manufacturing, age, environmental conditions, shipping and handling, etc. If the bezel and the entry end of the bill acceptor are misaligned, the entry slot may be partially concealed and thereby interfere with a player's ability to insert bills into the entry slot. In addition, the entry end of the bill acceptor includes certain visual status indicators such as miniature LED's indicative of the bill acceptor's operating state, e.g., functioning properly, malfunctioning, full bill cassette, etc. The bezel includes one or more transmissive windows that normally reveal the status indicators when the bezel and the entry end are aligned. If the bezel and the entry end are misaligned, the status indicators might be partially concealed and thereby interfere with a person's ability to easily detect the operating state of the bill acceptor. To cure any misalignment between the bezel and the entry end of the bill acceptor, the position of the front door, bezel, and/or the bill acceptor may require manual adjustment.
In accordance with the present invention, a peripheral component arrangement for a gaming machine comprises a peripheral component and a floating bezel. The peripheral component is mounted within a housing of the gaming machine and includes an entry end with an entry slot. The bezel is floatably mounted to a front door of the housing and is mated to the entry end of the peripheral component when the front door is closed. Because the bezel is floatably mounted to the front door, the bezel can shift relative to the front door so as to align with and properly mate to the entry end of the peripheral component. The alignment of the bezel relative to the entry end of the peripheral component ensures that the entry slot is fully exposed for receiving or dispensing bills, tickets, coupons, vouchers, cards, or the like and that any status indicators on the entry end are visible through the bezel.
The foregoing and other advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings.
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the invention is not intended to be limited to the particular forms disclosed. Rather, the invention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Referring now to the drawings,
The bezel 12 is floatably mounted to the front door 14 of the housing 18 and mated to the entry end 20 of the bill acceptor 16 when the front door 14 is closed. Because the bezel 12 is floatably mounted to the front door 14, the bezel 12 can shift relative to the front door 14 so as to align with and properly mate to the entry end 20 of the bill acceptor 16.
The bezel 12 is floatably mounted to the front door 14 by a pair of fasteners 30. Each fastener 30 extends loosely through a respective first aperture 26 in the bezel 12 and is fixed within (e.g., by threading if the fastener 30 is screw) a respective second aperture 28 in the front door 14. The second aperture 28 is generally in line with and smaller than the first aperture 26. The fastener 30 is preferably a screw, bolt, or the like having a large head 32. The large head 32 rests either on a wall or shoulder 34 encompassing the aperture 26 or on an intervening washer that, in turns, rests on the shoulder 34.
The aperture 26 is sufficiently larger than the body of fastener 30 to allow the bezel 12 to shift relative to the front door 14 by approximately one-eighth inch in any direction from an unshifted center position. Referring to
Because the bezel 12 is floatably mounted to the front door 14, the bezel 12 can shift relative to the front door 14 so as to align with and properly mate to the entry end 20 of the bill acceptor 16. The alignment of the bezel 12 relative to the entry end 20 of the bill acceptor 16 ensures that the entry slot 22 is fully exposed for receiving bills and that any status indicators 24 on the entry end 20 are visible through corresponding windows in the bezel 12. The status indicators 24 may be miniature LED's and/or character-based displays indicative of the bill acceptor's operating state, e.g., functioning properly, malfunctioning, full bill cassette, etc.
While the present invention has been described with reference to one or more particular embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that many changes may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Each of these embodiments and obvious variations thereof is contemplated as falling within the spirit and scope of the claimed invention, which is set forth in the following claims:
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040053698 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |