Patents by Inventor Peter J. Hanchar

Peter J. Hanchar has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7387572
    Abstract: The present invention provides a gaming machine with a trunnion mounted display. In addition to a video display, the trunnion mounted display includes a first trunnion bracket attached to the video display, the first trunnion bracket having a first trunnion disposed thereon at a center horizontal rotating axis of the video display, and having a first hole and a second hole disposed therein. The trunnion mounted display also includes a second trunnion bracket attached to the video display, the second trunnion bracket having a second trunnion disposed thereon at the center horizontal rotating axis, the second trunnion projecting outward from the second trunnion bracket in a horizontal direction opposite the first trunnion. Two trunnion supports having apertures disposed therein to receive the first and second trunnion, and a pull pin mounted in the first trunnion support, enable the trunnion mounted display to be pivoted into a maintenance position.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 11, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 17, 2008
    Assignee: WMS Gaming Inc.
    Inventor: Peter J. Hanchar
  • Patent number: 5335910
    Abstract: A pinball elevator has an inclined conveyor belt tensioned between two pulleys and driven by an electric motor. The belt is perforated with a series of spaced circular apertures for receiving the pinball. Preferably, the apertures have a diameter of about 80% of the diameter of the pinball. A lower one of the pulleys is rotatably mounted beneath the playfield of the pinball machine, and an upper one of the pulleys is rotatably mounted above the playfield. The ball is received by the belt at an entrance location, and is ejected from the belt at an exit location. The ball passes above and over the upper pulley when being conveyed by the belt from the entrance location to the exit location. The upper pulley has a concave central region to prevent the pinball from being prematurely ejected from the belt by the upper pulley. At the entrance location, the pinball sits on the belt and abuts against a wall of the playfield.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 13, 1993
    Date of Patent: August 9, 1994
    Assignee: Premier Technology
    Inventors: Raymond C. Tanzer, Peter J. Hanchar
  • Patent number: 5333866
    Abstract: A pinball machine has a plurality of ball-deflecting components mounted to a playfield section. The playfield section is selectively translated in response to player input, so that the ball is deflected by the ball-deflecting components to locations selected by the player. The translation of the playfield section, for example, is responsive to the conventional push-button switches that are operated by the player for activating flippers, and in this case the push-buttons activate respective solenoids for translating the playfield section in two different directions. The playfield section, however, could be translated in different directions along two or three orthogonal axes in response to a more complex player-input device such as a joy-stick.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 12, 1993
    Date of Patent: August 2, 1994
    Assignee: Premier Technology
    Inventors: Raymond C. Tanzer, Peter J. Hanchar
  • Patent number: 5158292
    Abstract: A gate and target assembly is raised from a first position, wherein a target is positioned in a channel on a playfield to interfere with passage of a ball through the channel, to a second position, wherein the target is positioned above the channel so as not to interfere with passage of the ball through the channel. In a preferred construction, a plurality of targets are pivotally mounted between two opposed upright brackets that extend from the playfield and define opposite sides of the channel, and the targets are moved from the first position to the second position by energizing a solenoid that is linked to a swinging crank pin of the assembly. Moreover, the assembly is covered by the simulated head of an animal, such as a hippopotamus, and the simulated animal head pivots up and down with the targets. A timer circuit, for example, keeps the simulated animal head up and the channel open for a predetermined period of time beginning when any one of the targets is struck.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 8, 1991
    Date of Patent: October 27, 1992
    Assignee: Premier Technology
    Inventor: Peter J. Hanchar
  • Patent number: 4667277
    Abstract: A base for an indicator lamp such as an LED includes a housing having a receptacle for the lamp. A male dovetail projects from a first side of the housing. A female dovetail channel is provided in a second side of the housing opposite the first side. The male and female dovetails have complementary dimensions. A plurality of the housings can be assembled into a lamp display by interlocking the male dovetail projection of one housing with the female dovetail channel of an adjacent housing. Additional male and female dovetail components can be provided on other sides of the housing to enable a plurality of housings to be assembled in various configurations. Channels provided in the rear wall of the housing accommodate wire leads from the indicator lamp mounted in the housing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 20, 1985
    Date of Patent: May 19, 1987
    Assignee: General Instrument Corporation
    Inventor: Peter J. Hanchar
  • Patent number: 4243222
    Abstract: An alternate target configuration is disclosed for a pinball game apparatus or the like, where two adjacent targets are mounted within a frame on the underside of the apparatus playfield, each adapted to move through a playfield opening between an exposed position above the playfield and a hidden position below the playfield. A linkage including an elongated member medially pivoted to the frame in the fashion of a seesaw is connected at its opposite ends to the respective targets, preferably when one target is exposed and the other target is hidden. The linkage is effective to shift both targets simultaneously from one alternate target position to another alternate target position where the other target is exposed and the one target is hidden. A spring toggles the seesaw linkage resiliently to the extreme limit of travel in each alternate target position.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 23, 1979
    Date of Patent: January 6, 1981
    Assignee: Bally Manufacturing Corporation
    Inventors: Irwin J. Grabel, Peter J. Hanchar
  • Patent number: D508268
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 12, 2003
    Date of Patent: August 9, 2005
    Assignee: WMS Gaming Inc.
    Inventors: Peter J. Hanchar, James M. Rasmussen, Norman R. Wurz, William C. Cesaroni, Robert J. Glenn, II, Jack B. Hough