This invention relates to gaming machines, and more particularly to enclosures for gaming machines.
Gaming machines require secure enclosures to protect money stored inside, and to prevent tampering to generate improper pay-outs. A typical gaming machine is a “slot machine” with a housing having apertures for video monitor or reel viewing, money or card insertion, coin or token pay-out, and printed certificate or receipt production.
To provide robust security, gaming machines typically employ housings that have few components, or unitary components, so that possible avenues of unauthorized entry such as seams, gaps, and the like are minimized or mitigated. A typical slot machine has a box-like housing that is open in the front, and which contains all the operational components of the machine. The front opening is secured by a “door” that is hinged to the housing, and which has a locking system to limit access to various levels of authorized personnel. Typical doors are in the shape of a rectangular frame, with welded horizontal cross members spanning between the sides of the frame, creating upper and lower rectangular apertures. Such doors are formed in several pieces, typically of sheet metal parts welded, ground, and polished to form a seamless surface without visible junctions or spaces through which cheating devices may be inserted. Such doors are finished after they are fully built, typically with bright polished chrome plating. Because the plating occurs after conventional doors are fully formed, the polishing of these large parts is very difficult and large plating tanks are required. This reduces the number of alternative plating service companies capable of providing the service, increasing plating costs and greatly reducing the availability of the service.
In addition, some portions of the door may be concealed during normal service, such as the lower rail concealed behind a “belly door” that encloses the lower aperture. With unitary doors, even the concealed portions are plated in the manner of the exposed portions, increasing the portion plating costs associated with plating materials such as chromium.
The present invention overcomes the limitations of the prior art by providing a security enclosure for a gaming machine having a main housing defining a chamber and having a major opening. A door assembly is connected to the housing and moves between an open position providing external access to the chamber and a closed position securing the major opening. The door has a number of components, at least some of which are elongated elements having fasteners at opposed end portions. At least one of the elements may be unplated or have a different surface finish, because the members may be finished prior to assembly. Each element is narrow enough to be plated in a relatively shallow or narrow plating tank that would be inadequate to receive conventionally assembled door.
The door 14 is a generally rectangular frame, and includes a left stile 30, right stile 32, top rail 34, bottom rail 36, and button rail 38. The stiles are substantially vertical members parallel to each other and positioned at the front edges of the side panels 20, 22 of the housing. The top rail 34 spans horizontally between the top ends of the stiles, the bottom rail 36 spans horizontally between the bottom ends of the stiles, and the button rail 38 spans horizontally between intermediate portions of the stiles spaced apart from both the top and bottom rails. The stiles and rails are assembled as will be discussed below to form a rigid door unit with no gaps at the junctions or seams between the door components, so that nothing may be inserted into the housing chamber enclosed by the door, to ensure security of the machine.
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The door is manufactured by forming each of the rails and stiles by stamping or other sheet metal cutting process, then folding each blanked sheet into the desired shape. All seams are welded, ground, and smoothed or polished, so that all visible front surfaces will have a uniform surface finish. Because the finishing steps are performed on the elongated smaller modular components, these steps are made easier, safer, and faster. This compares to the difficulty of finishing a large, cumbersome unitary door, with the challenges of polishing interior angles. The lower rail need not be finely finished after welding, because it will not be visible to the user. Then, the rails and stiles receive surface finishing. For the unexposed lower rail, it receives only a corrosion resistant paint, while the visible rails and stiles are plated with chrome or other desired metal or fine surface finish. The finish is generally applied directly to the formed and polished metal, with some finishes requiring several layers, such as lacquers or clear coats to protect pigmented paints or plating.
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After finishing, the rails and stiles are interconnected by the fasteners, with the fasteners being accessed from the rear of the door so that no fasteners are accessible from the outside of the enclosure after assembly. While removable and reusable fasteners such as the threaded studs, screws, and nuts are preferred because they permit rework and partial disassembly and reassembly for service and repair, alternative doors may use permanent fasteners such as rivets, screws and nuts, adhesives, and other methods that do not impair the pre-finished surfaces that will be visible to a user upon completion. After the door is assembled, the belly door is attached to conceal the bottom rail.
By forming and finishing the components before assembly, a modular system may be employed in which certain components may be used for different enclosures, such as standardized horizontal rails used for machines of different heights with different length stiles. Further, identical components may be stocked in different surface finishes, manufactured efficiently with large production volumes. By inventorying the components disassembled, significant space is saved. In addition, packages shipped to and from a plating company are significantly more compact, reducing shipping costs.
While the above is discussed in terms of preferred and alternative embodiments, the invention is not intended to be so limited. For instance, not all door components need to be fabricated of the same material. The modularity advantages of the invention may be achieved with elements of different materials, including plastic, composite, wood, glass, and unlimited other alternative in addition to or instead of sheet steel.