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  • Roller
    Member
    • Feb 2010
    • 6975

    #1

    Coinstar

    I have been re-cycling my pennies through Coinstar and somehow I always feel short changed. Are these machines calibrated/checked by any authority or is accuracy left up to the owner? I know that bank bag pennies always have dimes in them (that's a miscount). How does it work anyhow? How do you get a Coinstar machine if you want one?
  • lineop3
    Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 3760

    #2
    I don't know if you can buy one or not but I had ask if I can buy some coins from them when they came to collect, and I was told I had to pay $5,000 for the lot.
    Maybe that'll give you an idea of what you might pay one x 2.

    Aisha

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    • jfines69
      Paid Member

      • Jun 2010
      • 28627

      #3
      The machine checks coin size and senses metal makeup to ensure only legal coins go in... It will sometimes reject perfectly good coins that's one of the reasons I will not use them again... I'd rather give the bank teller something to do on a busy day... Count out 10,000 LCs'... LOL... If you know how much you went in with then you can calculate to make sure it is correct!!!
      Jim
      Jim
      (A.K.A. Elmer Fudd) Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! Good Hunting!!!

      Comment

      • Radarcoin

        #4
        A couple of our bank branches have coin processing machines, similar to Coinstar. If you have an account, there is no charge to dump your coins, take the receipt to a teller, and either deposit into your account, or get cash back. If not a bank member, they charge a 5% processing fee. I'm not sure what Coinstar charges.

        Bob
        Radarcoin

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        • Cdiddle
          Member
          • Jul 2010
          • 974

          #5
          Radarcoin, that is the same with my banks here that have coin machines.
          Cindy

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          • Roller
            Member
            • Feb 2010
            • 6975

            #6
            I pay 8 1/2% to Coinstar. I just can't justify spending the time to wrap pennies. I have not yet gotten up the nerve to bring 10,000 coins to a teller to deposit. I suppose they would stop selling me bricks. I don't think they will take that much loose change anyway. My concern is that on top of teh near 10% charge with Coinstar, the machine also shorts me. If anyone knows of a bank in South Florida that has a coin machine, I would sure like to know. I'll open an account tomorrow (Monday, anyway).

            Comment

            • car10

              #7
              Originally posted by Roller
              I pay 8 1/2% to Coinstar. I just can't justify spending the time to wrap pennies. I have not yet gotten up the nerve to bring 10,000 coins to a teller to deposit. I suppose they would stop selling me bricks. I don't think they will take that much loose change anyway. My concern is that on top of teh near 10% charge with Coinstar, the machine also shorts me.
              Why not buy the bricks from one branch and return the re-wrapped coins to a different branch of the same bank? By doing this you reduce the risk of getting your own coins back and you are not charged any fees or being short-changed. It has worked for me.

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