The V-165 has a gravity feed,serpentine style vending rack, at the bottom of each vending column is a gate that is supposed to trigger/vend when that selection is pushed, the selected columns gate solenoid actuates & the gate is released from it's latched position, the weight of the stack of cans pushes the bottom can forward into the vending gate, it then rolls over the gate itself & as it slides out of the column, it causes the gate to teeter-totter & block the next available can, ( so it doesn't double vend) once the can clears the column & drops out of the way, the gate flips back to it's original position & the next can rolls into the "ready to vend" position.
The important thing to remember about this style of can-vendor assembly is that
each and every column must have at least two or three cans minimum, or the whole vending circuit is disabled, the machine wont accept any coins & all of the selection buttons will be disabled. Why? because each column has a "ready to vend" switch wired in series with all of the other columns, which then passes the "ready" voltage ( or current if you like) up to the selection switches. So if one column is left empty or below the minimum pre-load level, it disables the whole mechanism. [Don't confuse these "Ready to vend" switches with the "selection Empty" switches further upstream in each of the columns can-path.]
so the bottom line is, Preload all of the columns with at least two cans each.
One more thing, watch were you stick you fingers as the whole vending system operates at line voltage (120-volts AC) ...also note that this design is prone corrosion & the brass push-on electrical connectors on the small micro-switches are VERY fragile & break if you breath on them...this is a very common failure point in this style of vendor...have fun!