![]() ![]() ![]() Other items for sale include plastic cups meant to hold coins from slot machines - most casinos use printed tickets nowadays - and serving stations from the casino's former buffet, which closed last fall. "They can't take them home until (state gaming regulators) approve all of the paperwork," he said. He said Nevada residents are allowed to own up to two slot machines, and to buy one at the Nugget they will have to provide proof they live in Nevada. He said the slot machines and video poker machines will sell for $300 to $1,200, depending on quality, adding other Carson City casinos can sell their unused gaming machines with the Nugget's equipment, too. "There's some cool stuff here, and a lot of it is antiques," Chancellor said. every day inside the former Nugget buffet.Ĭhancellor said casino and business owners, as well as Gold Card members at the Nugget, will get a chance to come in on March 18 for a soft sale before the items become available to the general public. March 20 until everything is gone, Chancellor said. The casino will be selling its unused equipment starting ![]() "I could open a major cafe or cafeteria," said Ronnal Chancellor, the facilities manager at the Carson City casino, strolling by rows of unused dinnerware, signs and bar stools. Inside the Carson Nugget's former buffet are rows of about 80 slot and video poker machines, bingo cards and restaurant equipment from a bygone era - well, at least the 1980s. ![]()
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