I use that same plastic tubes and roll hundreds of dollars a week at home but you have to kinda shake it as you're dumping them in there. Once you get the hang of it, it does pretty good
I have the one that only has one row and it works fine. The the coin wrappers out and your life will be much better. Mine also never really jammed, only had issues a couple of times when foreign coins were in there. Also mine has a downward slope so if you pour them from high to low not really any issues. If you want to be able to dump a bucket of coins in then you probably have to spend some coin and get a more expensive machine.
It Took like 1-2 hours and in 15 pieces to unjam it then put in back in 1 piece again it finally works again after that. Guess what year of the penny was stuck in the machine I'll tell you it was 2020 lol it's the same one as in the video plus I had to make some adjustments because there was extra plastic that was a pain but it works fine no more jams and coins getting stuck.
@@caetanocluster7002 I know after all that I'd quit but what I found on the inside was what looks like unfinished molding of the plastic. After I cut the excess plastic off. It worked almost like one of those coinstar machines without the 11.9+% fee's of course lol
Just bought one. It's jaming several times a roll. Like yours. Then overfilling. Wish hubby's worked as well as other videos on youtube with this same coin sorter.
@@oldguysmusic2929 Thanks but that wasn't it. It's goes at it's own speed. We followed instructions. We even tried a few. Several days of heck with it. Returned and bought another. No problem at all.
OK.. where to start.. the machine is a SORTER/counter/roller while the plastic tubes are not. You were working with a pile of only quarters. The machine will shine if you have mixed coins. You picked up the coins by hand for the tubes but dumped them from a bucket for the machine. Hardly a fair comparison. You complained about the time to pick up the coins while wearing gloves. Don't do that. Slide the cardboard to the edge of the table and "sweep" the coins into the tubes. Then "tip" the tubes to dump out the excess coins.
The electric coin counter seems to only to sort 20 dollars of quarters at time. User also has to move the sleeves out for the next one to be filled. This is something that the counter ought to be able to do for itself. The coins seem to fly everywhere in addition. A high maintenance counter as far as I can tell. Its noisy as hell too. Have you found a coin counter that is well made? My coin counting is much smaller piles of coin. But as a sight impaired person it would nice to find something that is reliable and good for home use.
If you are looking for a professional machine for sorting, counting and packing/rolling coins for anything more serious than a hobbie, don't watch this video. If you really want to tell people to think twice about buying something, you really shouldn't generalize it down to your opinion of one specific product/machine. This would be a much better video if there were multiple types/brands/models demonstrated other than just one crappy machine. You buy a crappy machine, it's not going to work well for you! There are FAR better machines out there. Buy a decent machine and you won't have these problems. I run a coin-op machine business and use a Glory CP-9 that I found in good used condition for sale on Mercari. I most likely paid less for it than he did for that crappy machine (which isn't intended for anything more than putting your pocket change into), and I can roll $500 in quarters (2,000 quarters) in less than 5 minutes. No joke. Here's a video of the exact machine I bought, being demonstrated by the guy I bought it from. It was because of this video he posted that convinced me to buy this machine from him. th-cam.com/video/_cuRQ-bj7qM/w-d-xo.html
Thanks. I’ve seen enough. Will continue the search for one that works.
I use that same plastic tubes and roll hundreds of dollars a week at home but you have to kinda shake it as you're dumping them in there. Once you get the hang of it, it does pretty good
I have the one that only has one row and it works fine. The the coin wrappers out and your life will be much better. Mine also never really jammed, only had issues a couple of times when foreign coins were in there. Also mine has a downward slope so if you pour them from high to low not really any issues. If you want to be able to dump a bucket of coins in then you probably have to spend some coin and get a more expensive machine.
It Took like 1-2 hours and in 15 pieces to unjam it then put in back in 1 piece again it finally works again after that. Guess what year of the penny was stuck in the machine I'll tell you it was 2020 lol it's the same one as in the video plus I had to make some adjustments because there was extra plastic that was a pain but it works fine no more jams and coins getting stuck.
Go figure right 😂
@@caetanocluster7002 I know after all that I'd quit but what I found on the inside was what looks like unfinished molding of the plastic. After I cut the excess plastic off. It worked almost like one of those coinstar machines without the 11.9+% fee's of course lol
Why did you put the quarters on a mat? I put mine in a coffee can or in a container and just scoop them out and fill the tube.
Just bought one. It's jaming several times a roll. Like yours. Then overfilling. Wish hubby's worked as well as other videos on youtube with this same coin sorter.
I suggest you slow down to see what is causing it to jam.
@@oldguysmusic2929 Thanks but that wasn't it. It's goes at it's own speed. We followed instructions. We even tried a few. Several days of heck with it. Returned and bought another. No problem at all.
OK.. where to start.. the machine is a SORTER/counter/roller while the plastic tubes are not. You were working with a pile of only quarters. The machine will shine if you have mixed coins. You picked up the coins by hand for the tubes but dumped them from a bucket for the machine. Hardly a fair comparison. You complained about the time to pick up the coins while wearing gloves. Don't do that. Slide the cardboard to the edge of the table and "sweep" the coins into the tubes. Then "tip" the tubes to dump out the excess coins.
Don't the manual tubes have a flat edge so you can slide them off the table, rather than picking them up one handful at a time?
Why would you put an affiliate link for the exact electric powered coin counter you said was not worth buying...??
The electric coin counter seems to only to sort 20 dollars of quarters at time. User also has to move the sleeves out for the next one to be filled. This is something that the counter ought to be able to do for itself. The coins seem to fly everywhere in addition. A high maintenance counter as far as I can tell. Its noisy as hell too.
Have you found a coin counter that is well made? My coin counting is much smaller piles of coin. But as a sight impaired person it would nice to find something that is reliable and good for home use.
You can get a coin counter that moves automatically, but it will cost a lot more than the unit featured.
you should try the machine without the paper rolls in the coin collector.
That kind of defeats the purpose of buying it, doesn't it
@@oldguysmusic2929 You just put the paper tubes on the same way he did for the plastic funnels. The machine sorts and counts, but the tubes do not.
this video is life in a nutshell
You need to start this video over.
8:08 cracked me up.
Funny
If you are looking for a professional machine for sorting, counting and packing/rolling coins for anything more serious than a hobbie, don't watch this video.
If you really want to tell people to think twice about buying something, you really shouldn't generalize it down to your opinion of one specific product/machine. This would be a much better video if there were multiple types/brands/models demonstrated other than just one crappy machine.
You buy a crappy machine, it's not going to work well for you!
There are FAR better machines out there. Buy a decent machine and you won't have these problems.
I run a coin-op machine business and use a Glory CP-9 that I found in good used condition for sale on Mercari. I most likely paid less for it than he did for that crappy machine (which isn't intended for anything more than putting your pocket change into), and I can roll $500 in quarters (2,000 quarters) in less than 5 minutes. No joke.
Here's a video of the exact machine I bought, being demonstrated by the guy I bought it from. It was because of this video he posted that convinced me to buy this machine from him.
th-cam.com/video/_cuRQ-bj7qM/w-d-xo.html
I'm glad I didn't buy this machine thanks for the review