Difference between revisions of "Rock-Ola"
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− | The '''Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation''' is a manufacturer of jukeboxes established in 1927 by David Cullen Rockola{{magref|bb|1965-03-20|53}}{{magref|bb|1975-10-11|51}}{{ref| | + | The '''Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation''' is a manufacturer of jukeboxes established in 1927 by David Cullen Rockola{{magref|bb|1965-03-20|53}}{{magref|bb|1975-10-11|51}}{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20190224043357/https://www.jukeboxhistory.info/RockOla/ROC-history.html}}. |
Starting in 1952{{magref|harmony|123|17}} and continuing through to the 1960s and 70s, [[Sega]] manufactured and distributed{{fileref|Billboard US 1965-10-23.pdf|page=52}} Rock-Ola's Jukeboxes{{fileref|Billboard US 1970-04-11.pdf|page=66}}{{fileref|Billboard US 1970-04-11.pdf|page=67}} for the Japanese market. It also worked with the company on non-Jukebox projects such as the distribution of the 1981 arcade game, ''[[Jump Bug]]''. | Starting in 1952{{magref|harmony|123|17}} and continuing through to the 1960s and 70s, [[Sega]] manufactured and distributed{{fileref|Billboard US 1965-10-23.pdf|page=52}} Rock-Ola's Jukeboxes{{fileref|Billboard US 1970-04-11.pdf|page=66}}{{fileref|Billboard US 1970-04-11.pdf|page=67}} for the Japanese market. It also worked with the company on non-Jukebox projects such as the distribution of the 1981 arcade game, ''[[Jump Bug]]''. |
Revision as of 07:10, 1 September 2023
Rock-Ola | ||
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Founded: 1927 | ||
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The Rock-Ola Manufacturing Corporation is a manufacturer of jukeboxes established in 1927 by David Cullen Rockola[1][2][3].
Starting in 1952[4] and continuing through to the 1960s and 70s, Sega manufactured and distributed[5] Rock-Ola's Jukeboxes[6][7] for the Japanese market. It also worked with the company on non-Jukebox projects such as the distribution of the 1981 arcade game, Jump Bug.
Hardware produced
- Rock-Ola 443 (1970)
- Rock-Ola 1446 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 1448 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 1455 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 403 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 4045 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 4085 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 414 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 4185 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 4185A (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 424 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 425 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 426 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 429 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 430 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 434 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 435 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 437 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 440 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 441 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 442 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 444 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 445 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 448 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 449 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 451 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 453 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 454 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 459 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 460 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 461 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 463 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 464 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 469 (19xx)
- Rock-Ola 470 (19xx)
References
- ↑ Billboard, "March 20, 1965" (US; 1965-03-20), page 53
- ↑ Billboard, "October 11, 1975" (US; 1975-10-11), page 51
- ↑ https://www.jukeboxhistory.info/RockOla/ROC-history.html (Wayback Machine: 2019-02-24 04:33)
- ↑ Harmony, "1993 11" (JP; 1993-11-01), page 17
- ↑ File:Billboard US 1965-10-23.pdf, page 52
- ↑ File:Billboard US 1970-04-11.pdf, page 66
- ↑ File:Billboard US 1970-04-11.pdf, page 67