# Episode 149 - The Chicane Lane

**Source:** For Amusement Only EM and Bingo Pinball Podcast  
**Type:** podcast_episode  
**Published:** 2015-08-07  
**Duration:** 5m 12s  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://foramusementonly.libsyn.com/episode-149-the-chicane-lane

---

## Analysis

Nicholas Baldridge discusses the Chicane Lane, a Bally innovation featuring two layers of plastics that create a weaving ball path pattern. The feature debuted in 1967's The Wiggler (designed by Barnyard Ted Zale) and was notably used in 1971's Sea Oscar. Baldridge explains the mechanical construction, maintenance requirements, and the feature's continued use in modern pinball design.

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] The Chicane Lane was first used in 1967's The Wiggler — _Nicholas Baldridge, host of For Amusement Only podcast, directly stating historical fact about the feature's origin_
- [HIGH] The Wiggler was designed by Barnyard Ted Zale — _Nicholas Baldridge attribution of design credit to Barnyard Ted Zale_
- [MEDIUM] Sea Oscar (1971) has the most easily recognized chicane lane in any game — _Nicholas Baldridge's subjective assessment of Sea Oscar's visual clarity regarding the chicane feature_
- [HIGH] Chicane lanes use two layers of plastics construction: visible playfield plastic layer with posts, and a secondary plastic layer underneath — _Nicholas Baldridge detailed technical explanation of the mechanical construction_
- [HIGH] Chicane lanes are used in modern games to slow the ball down on ramp returns — _Nicholas Baldridge explaining contemporary application of the historical feature_
- [HIGH] Cleaning the chicane lane is critical because dirt can be picked up and thrown onto the playfield — _Nicholas Baldridge maintenance and servicing guidance based on experience_

### Notable Quotes

> "The Chicane Lane is simply an arrangement of plastics that cause the ball to move in a back and forth weaving pattern."
> — **Nicholas Baldridge**, early episode
> _Definition and core explanation of the featured innovation_

> "The Wiggler has one big main Louis Toy and that the Chicane Lane in the upper left. The ball wiggles back and forth and comes back out of gate to ya. Right to your flipper."
> — **Nicholas Baldridge**, mid episode
> _Describes the player experience and ball flow in The Wiggler's chicane lane_

> "Sea Oscar probably has the most easily recognized chicane lane in any game. It's really simple to see exactly the way the ball is going to travel through that when you look at pictures."
> — **Nicholas Baldridge**, mid episode
> _Highlights Sea Oscar as the most visually clear example of the feature_

> "It's important that you do so or else the ball is going to pick up dirt and throw it on the playfield and grind it in and the artwork in those lanes is usually very important."
> — **Nicholas Baldridge**, late episode
> _Emphasizes maintenance importance and consequence of neglect_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Nicholas Baldridge | person | Host of For Amusement Only EM and Bingo Pinball Podcast; expert on electromechanical pinball design and history |
| Barnyard Ted Zale | person | Pinball designer known for unusual and eye-catching designs; designed The Wiggler (1967) |
| The Wiggler | game | 1967 Bally pinball machine; first game to feature the Chicane Lane; designed by Barnyard Ted Zale |
| Sea Oscar | game | 1971 Bally pinball machine; features one of the most recognizable chicane lane implementations |
| Bally | company | Historical pinball manufacturer; innovator of the Chicane Lane feature |
| For Amusement Only | organization | Podcast dedicated to EM and Bingo pinball discussion; hosted by Nicholas Baldridge |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Chicane Lane design and mechanics, Bally pinball innovations, Electromechanical pinball history (1960s-1970s)
- **Secondary:** Pinball maintenance and restoration, Pinball designer profiles (Ted Zale), Two-layer plastic construction in pinball

### Sentiment

**Positive** (0.75) — Baldridge presents the Chicane Lane as an innovative, fun feature with practical application. Tone is educational and appreciative of the design and craftsmanship involved. No critical or negative sentiment detected.

### Signals

- **[design_philosophy]** Chicane Lane represents Bally's design philosophy of creating mechanical features that slow ball flow and add visual complexity while maintaining player engagement (confidence: high) — Baldridge explains the feature's dual purpose: playfield design innovation in 1967 and continued use in modern games for ball pacing control on ramp returns
- **[technology_signal]** Two-layer plastic construction technique was an advanced manufacturing method for 1967, indicating Bally's technical capabilities and innovation in plastic molding (confidence: medium) — Detailed explanation of the multi-layer construction process with posts and plastic layers, suggesting specialized manufacturing

---

## Transcript

 What's that sound? It's 4 Amusement Only, the EM and Bingo Pinball Podcast. Welcome back to 4 Amusement Only. This is Nicholas Baldridge. Continuing in our discussion of what innovations Bally brought to pinball. Well, tonight I wanted to talk about the Chicane Lane. The Chicane Lane is simply an arrangement of plastics that cause the ball to move in a back and forth weaving pattern. The first game to use this feature was 1967's The Wiggler. This game was designed by Ted Zale, who is known for his unusual and very interesting and eye-catching designs. The Wiggler has one big main toy and that the Chicane Lane in the upper left The ball wiggles back and forth and comes back out of gate to ya Right to your flipper Another famous game with this feature is Bally's Sea Ray from 1971. In fact, this game probably has the most easily recognized chicane lane in any game. It's really simple to see exactly the way the ball is going to travel through that when you look at pictures. And playing the game, it's exactly as you'd think. It's a fun little feature, and it's one that's been used since then many, many times in modern games as a trick to slow the ball down on ramp returns and the like. But these games did the same thing with two layers of plastics. So to build this, you would have your playfield plastic, which is visible to the player. You remove this layer and you going to have posts either bell posts since this was bally which are formed into the plastic or some form of mini plastic post Underneath this layer of posts is going to be the next layer of plastic. This layer of plastic has yet another post underneath, and then you have the playfield surface. One of the most important things with the chicane lane is cleaning it. So because you have two layers of plastic and a playfield, you have an extra piece to clean. It's important that you do so or else the ball is going to pick up dirt and throw it on the playfield and grind it in and the artwork in those lanes is usually very important. There are inserts typically which tell you something about what happens when you travel through and so it's important that you're able to see what's going on. If the plastic is covered in dirt then you going to have problems later on Now because it plastic these can certainly break I haven't shopped enough games with this feature to have seen that happen, but it's certainly in the realm of possibility. So, I think the games that Bally made with this feature were quite fun, and many of them, being Ted Zale designs, had special extra touches, like Multiball, which we'll talk about soon. Well, that's all for tonight. Thank you again for joining me. My name again is Nicholas Baldridge. You can reach me at 4amusementonlypodcast at gmail.com. You can listen to us on iTunes, Stitcher, Pocket Cast, via RSS, on Facebook, on Twitter, at Bingo Podcast. You can follow me on Instagram at nbaldridge. Or you can listen to us on our website, which is 4amusementonly.libsyn.com. You can also call us on the bingos line. That's 724-BINGOS1. 724-246-4671. Thank you very much for listening, and I'll talk to you next time.

_(Acquisition: groq_whisper, Enrichment: v3)_

---

*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: afa2f36e-6f78-4237-b7d2-c8dc6e23b7b0*
