can you email highest possible resolution pics to slotpics@cdyn.com?
the entire game front with door closed and the entire area at the bottom where the hopper goes with good lighting. Want to see the hopper socket, other stuff that is around it, and if the rails for holding the hopper are there.
to help verify the game id, see what is behind the top glass. Your glass came from a 1072 ... just need to confirm what's inside. If you have hat symbols on the reels, then the reels are almost certainly 1072 also.
without a schematic, it will take a bit more work to figure out what should be on the hopper and how to wire it. You'd really want to unscrew the hopper socket and flip it down/around as best as possible and try and identify all the wire colors.
Bally was pretty consistent on the wires - using the same colors for the same functions on most of the machines, so you have a decent chance that picking a similar type of game will let you use a different schematic to at least give big hints as to where the wires go.
it'd be a bit time consuming, but it's not impossible to figure things out. Games with a 24 pin hopper plug/socket are a bit simpler as that usually means all the parts on the hopper are the common stuff like payout relay, payout counter and delay relay.
the 1072 looks like a remake of the 815 "liberty bell special" in a bigger cabinet. Those two models use the same reel tapes, reel wiper wiring and slotted reel index discs. The payout counters are different and I don't have the paperwork for either, but that's not a problem as any payout counter disc that supports the pays on the glass will work,
the wiring would likely be pretty similar to the 815-1, which you can find on
https://bingo.cdyn.com/slots/ - tho you'd probably have some extra stuff that is common to later model machines.
btw, what you are missing looks like this:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/315378139065 ... however, at his asking price you can usually buy whole machines on the west coast.