# Tilting Required

**Source:** Pinball News Website  
**Type:** article  
**Published:** 2015-07-21  
**Beat:** Pinball

**URL:** https://www.pinballnews.com/news/pinballpendolino.html

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## Analysis

The Strasburg Rail Road in Pennsylvania operates a novelty 'Pinball Pendolino' experience where passengers play a dozen vintage pinball machines (1960s–early 1980s titles) inside a tilting passenger carriage during 45-minute train journeys through Amish country. The experience requires modified tilt settings and specialized ball control due to train motion. Tickets cost $18–$33 plus a $5 handling fee, with capacity limited to 24 players (two per machine). One rider reports the experience as challenging and enjoyable, comparing it to 'hitting a knuckleball.'

### Key Claims

- [HIGH] Strasburg Rail Road operates a train carriage with 12 pinball machines from Steve Zuckerman's Silverball Museum Arcade collection — _Article directly states machines from collection of Steve Zuckerman, co-owner of Silverball Museum Arcade in Asbury Park, New Jersey_
- [HIGH] Machines in the carriage range from 1960s electromechanical titles (Cow Poke, Soccer, Apollo, Star Trek) to late 1970s/early 1980s electronic games (Firepower II, Night Rider, Eight Ball) — _Explicit list provided in article with era classifications_
- [HIGH] Playing pinball on a moving train requires modified tilt settings and exceptional ball control due to train motion — _JR Pinball directly experienced and reported difficulty comparable to 'hitting a knuckleball' and noted tilt likely disabled_
- [HIGH] The Pinball Pendolino operates on hourly departures from 11am to 5pm on weekends starting July 18, 2015 — _Stated in article with specific dates and times_
- [HIGH] Tickets cost $18 (or $33 for two) plus a $5 handling fee with maximum 24 passengers per carriage — _Article provides explicit pricing and capacity information_

### Notable Quotes

> "Playing with the train moving was like 'trying to hit a knuckleball'"
> — **JR Pinball**, Rider experience, date not specified
> _Vivid description of the physical challenge unique to playing pinball on a moving train_

> "Many times, the ball would be saved from a drain between the flippers or an outlane."
> — **JR Pinball**, Rider experience
> _Illustrates how train motion unpredictably affects ball physics and play outcomes_

> "I can't imagine any of the games had the 'tilt' activated at all, because the motion of the train would surely have caused each game to tilt."
> — **JR Pinball**, Rider experience
> _Explains the operational adjustment needed to accommodate train movement—tilt disabled or sensitivity greatly reduced_

> "It was like something you would be doing in a strange dream, but it was very real, and very much fun!"
> — **JR Pinball**, Rider experience conclusion
> _Captures the surreal and memorable nature of the experience for pinball enthusiasts_

### Entities

| Name | Type | Context |
|------|------|---------|
| Strasburg Rail Road | organization | Pennsylvania-based heritage railroad operator in Lancaster County that installed 12 pinball machines in a passenger carriage for the Pinball Pendolino experience |
| Silverball Museum Arcade | organization | Arcade museum located in Asbury Park, New Jersey; co-owned by Steve Zuckerman who supplied the pinball machine collection for the Pendolino |
| Steve Zuckerman | person | Co-owner of Silverball Museum Arcade; collector and source of the 12 vintage pinball machines used in the Pinball Pendolino experience |
| JR Pinball | person | Pinball enthusiast who rode the Pinball Pendolino and provided firsthand account of the experience |
| East Strasburg | location | Station in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania where Pinball Pendolino train departs |
| Paradise, Pennsylvania | location | Destination town for the 45-minute round-trip Pinball Pendolino journey |
| Pendolino | product | Tilting passenger train carriage technology; used as novelty host for pinball machines in this experience |
| Cow Poke | game | 1960s electromechanical pinball machine in the Pendolino carriage collection |
| Firepower II | game | Late 1970s/early 1980s solid-state pinball game in the Pendolino collection |
| Night Rider | game | Late 1970s/early 1980s electronic pinball game in the Pendolino collection |
| Eight Ball | game | Classic pinball title listed in the Pendolino collection (though JR Pinball's ride had Gottlieb Astro instead) |
| Hokus Pokus | game | Bally pinball machine in Pendolino collection; was out of order during JR Pinball's visit |

### Topics

- **Primary:** Novelty pinball experience/venue, Vintage/heritage pinball machines, Game physics under unusual conditions (moving train)
- **Secondary:** Pinball collecting and museum curation, Pinball tourism and experiential events

### Sentiment

**Positive** (0.82) — Article frames the Pinball Pendolino as a charming, unique experience. JR Pinball's firsthand account is enthusiastic and reflects genuine enjoyment despite the technical challenges of playing on a moving train. Language emphasizes novelty, fun, and memorable experience rather than criticism.

### Signals

- **[event_signal]** Pinball Pendolino is a scheduled, ticketed experiential event combining heritage train travel with vintage pinball gameplay in a historically restored carriage (confidence: high) — Article documents scheduled weekend operations with specific departure times, ticket pricing, and capacity management
- **[product_strategy]** Tilt sensitivity on machines in the carriage requires modification or disabling to accommodate train motion without triggering tilt during normal play (confidence: high) — JR Pinball explicitly states 'I can't imagine any of the games had the tilt activated at all, because the motion of the train would surely have caused each game to tilt'

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## Transcript

Date: 21st July 2015

It's not something most of us have cause to consider, but back in the '60s and '70s when train companies around the world were looking to run ever-faster services, the one thing holding them back wasn't the power or efficiency of the locomotives. It was the track.

How could a curved track designed for trains running at 50mph hope to accommodate vehicles travelling at twice that speed without them tipping over? The answer was to tilt the train in the opposite direction - to lean them into the curve - so that they remained upright and passengers were not thrown around.

A Pendolino tilting train

So it was that the first 'Pendolino'-style Advanced Passenger Trains entered service on the UK's West Coast Main Line route, to much scepticism and derision from the British public. However, the Pendolino trains are still very much in use today.

All very interesting, but how - apart from a play on the word 'tilt' - does this affect pinball?

To find out, we go to Strasburg in southern Pennsylvania, around sixty miles west of Philadelphia, from where the Strasburg Rail Road operates it's rather awesome steam locomotives and passenger cars.

The Strasburg Rail Road

What could be better that a leisurely and relaxing train journey through Amish country, enjoying the beautiful scenery, reclining in a first class carriage, and marvelling at the elegance and sophistication of the golden age of rail travel?

Entering Amish country

Obviously you liven things up by installing some pinball machines. A dozen of them to be exact, carefully fitted into one of the train's tilting Pendolino passenger carriages.

Pinball in a Pendolino

(click to enlarge)

Electromechanical titles from the '60s such as Cow Poke, Soccer, Apollo and Star Trek share the space inside the authentically-restored wooden passenger carriage with electronic games from the late '70s and early '80s like Firepower II, Night Rider and Eight Ball.

The games share the ornate carriage with passenger seating

(click to enlarge)

Here's the full list of machines in the train carriage.

Apollo

Big Ben

Blue Note

Cow Poke

Eight Ball

Evil Knievel

Firepower II

Flipper Pool

Hokus Pokus

Night Rider

Pop-a-Card

Soccer

The train takes passengers on a 45-minute round-trip journey from East Strasburg to the town of Paradise in Pennsylvania.

East Strasburg station

Playing pinball in a Pendolino carriage requires a whole new level of ball control and anticipation skills as the train rounds the curves in the track, as well as a rather more relaxed tilt setting. The machines themselves come from the collection of Steve Zuckerman who is the co-owner of the Silverball Museum Arcade in Asbury Park, New Jersey.

Access to the pinballs in limited to those with special Pinball Pendolino tickets, which cost $18 (or $33 for two) plus a $5 handling fee. Pairs of passengers are allocated a two-person seat and its associated machine to play during the trip. With twelve machines, that makes a maximum of twenty-four passengers in the car.

The Pinball Pendolino runs on the hour from 11am until 5pm during weekends from July 18th, 2015. Pre-booking is definitely advised although there's no facility to pre-select the machine you would like to play.

If you've ridden the Pinball Pendolino, let us know about your experience.

Your

screen name: (Will be shown with your comment)

Your

e-mail address: (Will not be shown)

Please tell us about your journey in the Pinball Pendolino:

Your comments:

JR Pinball:

My brother and I drove down to the Strasburg Railroad after touring the Yuengling beer brewery a few weeks ago.

It was late in the evening, and we purchased tickets for the 7pm train when the ticket booth opened at 6pm. We were able to immediately board the train, and we were the only ones on that particular coach, so we enjoyed playing all the pinballs for a whole hour before the train departed.

The Bally Hokus Pokus was out of order, and there was a rather scarce Gottlieb Astro add-a-ball wedgehead in place of the Eight Ball which you have listed.

The train departed at 7PM, and it was quite an experience playing the games as the train rollicked down the tracks! I can't imagine any of the games had the 'tilt' activated at all, because the motion of the train would surely have caused each game to tilt. I commented that playing with the train moving was like "trying to hit a knuckleball". Many times, the ball would be saved from a drain between the flippers or an outlane.

It was definitely a departure from the way we normally play pinball, and it was really, really fun! The countryside was beautiful as the sun was setting over this picturesque area of rural Pennsylvania.

The train itself was very charming, with coaches serving dinner and others offering wine and cheese. My brother and I though, being the pinheads we are, enjoyed the unique experience of pinball in a vintage coach hauled by a steam locomotive.

It was like something you would be doing in a strange dream, but it was very real, and very much fun!

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*Exported from Journalist Tool on 2026-04-13 | Item ID: b2343534-cb62-4284-9137-53d71da37056*
