B Firman & Co. products

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willborl
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B Firman & Co. products

Post by willborl »

Does anyone have any info on this company?

Have heard it mentioned quite a few times regarding bandit conversions. Did they convert for the English market?

Thanks.
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

It seems nobody does have much on them.

From Braithwaite's book we learn that B Firman & Co. operated from Clifton Engineering Works, Curtis Street, Nottingham, distributing other makers' machines in the 1920s before becoming "manufacturing engineers engaged in fruits conversions and rebuilds" by 1931. In 1957, they were called B Firman & Co. (Nottingham) Ltd. and by 1960, Firman was an operator and caterer at Skegness.

They are best known for their bootleg versions of Mills Poinsettia, Roman Head and War Eagle. Notably, these are on old penny play, without jackpots and have decidedly rough cabinet castings (perhaps sand-cast from Mills originals). Presumably, they were made to revamp/rehouse earlier salvaged mechanisms? They also designed and built from scratch the only British bandit in the American style, namely, the Egyptian Bell, Sphinx or All Brit Bell Fruit. Again, I guess they made a cabinet only and fitted it with an American mechanism converted to old penny play. Finally, they made another bandit in a curious, brutal style all of their own which, judging by its rarity, was not a great seller. I believe they also invented a jackpot mechanism for retrofitting on pre-jackpot bandits.

Aside from bandits, Firman produced viewers, some kind of racing game and two rather tinny, metal-cased coin drop skill games: Pushapenny and Pushapenny Three Win with cigarette payout (example currently offered on ebay).
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treefrog
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Re: Firmans

Post by treefrog »

Interesting, I have a seen a few bandits stated as being Firmans, again as stated often relating to their copying of Mills and other machines, usually with poor or odd casting configurations, eg having the coin slot on the wrong side. There was a machine Poinsettia type machine at the Elephant auction, which even had an "F" in the castings (which did not look a poor quality), but the mechanism was very different, not Mills, Jennings, Buckley etc, so I wonder if they produced their own complete machine as well. Didn't take a picture of the mechanism unfortunately...
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

tree-frog wrote:I wonder if they produced their own complete machine as well. Didn't take a picture of the mechanism unfortunately...
I assumed they didn't, because it wouldn't be economically viable for a little British outfit to compete with what the American big boys were geared up to mass produce. Also, there was plenty of cheap second-hand stock on the market.

That Poinsettia's front is completely different from the Mills, with its token award and big Firman design double jackpot. I'm also curious to see the mechanism now.

The Egyptian Bells, below, are from Ebay (half Poinsettia), Christies Costa sale and last November's Coventry auction. I don't think any of them had working jackpots.
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

More Firman bandits...

1. Another Egyptian - why do these never seem to have real jackpots, which is what Firman was known for?
2. The "deco-brutalist" bandit - with double jackpot and standard Mills mechanism.
3. Several jackpot fronts (described as Firman revamps of Mills) from Jo van Dongen's Bandieten - all quite different from each other (and different from the Poinsettia revamp posted by tree-frog, above). The first has a patent number above the jackpot (illegible in the picture) and the one to the right of it, strangely, appears to be on 5c coinage.
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coppinpr
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Re: Firmans

Post by coppinpr »

Am I right in thinking this machine on ebay at the moment is a Firmans?

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Mills-Egyptia ... 500wt_1413
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willborl
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Re: Firmans

Post by willborl »

Thanks for the interesting info gentlemen.

Seems like they created a lot of weird and wonderful bandits out of odd bits from anything they could get hold of.

I quite like the Egyptian version on eBay at the moment, it appears that the Firman's bandits don't achieve as high prices as original Poinsettia's though. Understandable I guess, people prefer original rather than cheaply converted.
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Re: Firmans

Post by silverbitz »

Hi Guys,
Here's another Egyptian Bell I recently renovated. The jackpot isn't just a blanking plate or false storage box but would seem to be active. There are two slide/backing plates with a thumb lip to the tops which would have been manually lifted to drop a jackpot, cleverly leaving a reserve. Must have been a pain for the operator, as the movement had to be removed to drop a win! The inner jackpot casting is screwed in, ie seperate from the bottom casting and has grooves for these plates and a locking device for security. Simple but effective!. I assume there won't be active jackpots for these as so far I've only seen pre jackpot mech's used. Also, I doubt any had escalators as the coin intake etc. doesn't allow. You will notice it's wider than half tops and was probably just keeping up with the latest trends in the early '30s to make it look fresh on otherwise older guts.
Andy
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

Hi Andy,
Must say, you've done a very nice job on that bandit. The ebay vendor says, "Machine is not fitted with a jackpot, it is a force jackpot just for show" and you say that the jackpot on yours had to be triggered manually by the operator removing the mechanism. That suggests the Sphinx pre-dates the other Firman jackpot fronts.
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Re: Firmans

Post by silverbitz »

I would say so. There seem to be several variations to the jackpot front itself but I assume they are all manually paid out. The machine must have been used in the States mainly using the poinsettia top casting, probably for ease of construction and of course, the gooseneck was already set up for 5c coins etc. The UK casting, set up for the 1d simply shortened the gooseneck which made the machine look fresh/sleek as was the incoming war eagles and castle fronts. Andy
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

Here's something else they made apparently, from Derby Auction House sale yesterday. Catalogue description: "An English art deco girlie peep show arcade machine, by Firmans of Nottingham, Through the Keyhole of the Door, old penny play, 165cm high, 54cm wide, c.1935, fully renovated ." The name, period, colours, hand painted flash are very reminiscent of those wall-mounted Through The Keyhole viewers in the S&L Fireworks cases. Could Firmans be responsible for these too?
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badpenny
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Re: Firmans

Post by badpenny »

Yup .... soon as I move away from the place interesting things start to appear in the local auction house.
There was also a table top Wurlitzer.

Here in Lincoln we get bits of Ruston Hornsby engines that generations of workers must have snaffled, and whose grandchildren are now lumbered with clearing out.
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Re: Firmans

Post by daveslot »

I was the phone bidder on the Wurly. Even more interesting was the following lot of a Polyphon with a chocolate vender.
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Re: Firmans

Post by slotalot »

Chocolate??? That's music to my ears :oops:
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

I thought the jukebox was the star piece. The Symphonium looked to me like it had undergone major restoration/reconstruction. But I didn't go to the auction and was judging solely on the tiny picture below* and the fact that a very derelict example surfaced a few years ago. I didn't bid on anything, but thought the estimate on the Wurlitzer seemed fair.
A Wurlitzer Model 61 countertop jukebox, designed by Paul Fuller, 78 rpm, 12 selections, lockable coin collection tray, 58cm high, c.1939
An unusual late 19th century walnut coin in the slot operated Symphonion Musik-Automat 'Lyra' Automaton chocolate vending music box, table top or wall mounted, 30cm discs playing on eighty-four teeth on two combs, arched cresting flanked by turned finials, arched glazed door flanked by reeded angles, applied with geometric mouldings, bun feet, 91cm high, c.1895
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daveslot
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Re: Firmans

Post by daveslot »

I thought it looked OK.
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Re: Firmans

Post by treefrog »

That Firmans viewer looked really nice, I wonder if the paint/enamel finish was original. The artwork looked a bit hand drawn/painted.
Met the guy who bought the Wurlitzer today, he is also hoping it is as good in the pictures when collecting. Not been persuaded by jukebox in the past, but this one would have been great given its size.
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

Never seen the Firman viewer before, but there's another, in Holland, with less than a day to go on German ebay currently at Euro 56. Anyone fancy bringing it home?
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Re: Firmans

Post by slotalot »

pennymachines wrote:Never seen the Firman viewer before, but there's another, in Holland, with less than a day to go on German ebay currently at Euro 56. Anyone fancy bringing it home?
Now that didn't take long, it's back on Ebay again :o ..... thought it had sold??
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/fortune-telle ... 3f1a0d2fec
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Re: Firmans

Post by pennymachines »

The mysteries of ebay. It appears to sell for Euro 251 one day and the next day the same vendor has it up again for a Buy-it-Now of Euro 1,750! I suspect the buyer got gazumped when post sale offers came in, but who knows...
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