View allAll Photos Tagged CoinSorter
Stolen, smashed open & left in the public toilets at Stembrook Carpark, Dover, a hot spot for drug use, dealing and prostitution (",)
This giant coin sorter has been abandoned in Death Valley National Park for almost 100 years. Little is known about it's operation or who built it. One can surmise, though, that these miners were rolling in money if they needed such a contraption.
Stolen, smashed open & left in the public toilets at Stembrook Carpark, Dover, a hot spot for drug use, dealing and prostitution (",)
coin acceptor, coin mechanism, coin selector, coin validators, coin slot, coin hopper, coin detector, coin reject. Money control, coin recognition system, coin motor, coin counter, coin sorter, coin box, ticket redemption machine, lottery machine, warning board, watch dog, time control board.
autmatic door microwave motion sensor, door sweep brush, automatic curved sliding door, infrared photocell, automatic door locks, touch sensor, boxer machine, automatic sliding gate motor,automatic door ,garage door, sliding door, revolving
coin acceptor, coin mechanism, coin selector, coin validators, coin slot, coin hopper, coin detector, coin reject. Money control, coin recognition system, coin motor, coin counter, coin sorter, coin box, ticket redemption machine, lottery machine, warning board, watch dog, time control board.
Coin sorter on display inside the Perkins Building at 811 S. Walnut in Coffeyville, Kansas.
The Perkins Building was designed by Luther Perkins and was built in 1890. It was home to the Condon National Bank from 1890-1916. The building became famous on October 5, 1892 when the Dalton Gang tried to rob it and the First National Bank. Noone had robbed two banks at the sametime. After a 15 minute gunfight with local citizens, 4 of the 5 members of the gang laid dead along with 4 citizens Emmett Dalton, the lone gangmember to survive was sentenced to life in prison in Lansing, Kansas. After 1916 the building became home to a feed store, an opera house, and the Dallton Museum. In 1972, the city of Coffeyville purchased the building and work on the exterior was completed in 1992. Interior restoration was completed in 1997.
NRIS #73000771. Added in 1973.
For more information www.kshs.org/resource/national_register/nominationsNRDB/M...
In Professor Eric Gedajlovic's BUS 493 "Entrepreneurial Opportunity: Discovery, Evaluation, and Implementation" class, Stacey Wallin invented this coin sorter with just duct tape, popsicle sticks, and paper clips.
coin acceptor, coin mechanism, coin selector, coin validators, coin slot, coin hopper, coin detector, coin reject. Money control, coin recognition system, coin motor, coin counter, coin sorter, coin box, ticket redemption machine, lottery machine, warning board, watch dog, time control board.
In Professor Eric Gedajlovic's BUS 493 "Entrepreneurial Opportunity Discovery, Evaluation, and Implementation" class, Stacey Wallin invented this coin sorter with just duct tape, popsicle sticks, and paper clips.
I developed a habit of emptying the change from my pockets every night early in my career, when I was still uncertain if I would have a job the next day. The coins wind up in any available pint-sized container, usually Chinese soup, or in this case, grated Pecorino Romano cheese.
The backdrop is a Cloud Dome 18% gray Infinity Board . I should have bought the white one first, but the neutral gray had its appeal.
In a previous career, I was a security officer at a munitions plant. The fellow who serviced the vending areas always sang a silly song, “I’ve Got a Pocketful of Peanuts” as he removed change and replenished the machines. My guess is he made up the song, since a Google search did not find it.
Lessons Learned: Sharp? You bet. Just look at the dog hairs contaminating the subject matter. Perhaps a little compressed air or a vacuum cleaner...
Edit (2012-09-26):
Pocketful of Peanuts was written by composer Duncan Lamont, for a children's program.
Digital Coin Sorter (FS-2D) from Royal Sovereign which sorts 312 coins per minute, uses anti-jam technology, and utilizes two rows of tubes for continuous sorting.
A friend asked me to upload a video of how it worked. The plastic container holds all my coin savings from high school in pennies, nickels, and dimes. Whenever my wallet got too heavy, I'd dump those into the container and use my quarters.
The total count of the plastic container, which was completely full to the brim when I started, amounted to $47.83 in just dimes, nickels, and pennies.
The purpose of the exercise was to experiment with the – at the time – new camera. Apparently I turned on the sepia option and left it on for a few shots. When I shut off the camera, the color option reset itself (otherwise, that could ruin, say, a wedding portfolio). The effect here is rather neat; a sort of golden tone.
Pneumatic Scale Corporation, LTD., circa 1940's
Automatically sorts, counts and rolls US coins.
Random artifact from the Museum of American Heritage, www.moah.org
The purpose of the exercise was to experiment with the – at the time – new camera. Apparently I turned on the sepia option and left it on for a few shots. When I shut off the camera, the color option reset itself (otherwise, that could ruin, say, a wedding portfolio). The effect here is rather neat; a sort of golden tone.
Here are some of my newest additions to my puzzle collection. Although technically not puzzles. They are model kit/construction kits. These "Build-A-Bank" kits were made by Mag-Nif Inc. in 2001. This set includes "Coin Coaster", "Money Mixer", "Treasure Twister". A fourth item, the "Sort-A-Saurus", was also released but, did not connect to these. Instead it was a triceratops with sorting device that dropped coins into its legs.
Mag-Nif Inc. seemed to have gone out of business a few years ago, as such these have gotten harder to find, on sites like Amazon, and ebay. But, I found these for sale on a site called;
Dazzling Discoveries, a "science, technology, engineering and mathematics" STEM educational company, which also operates a store, that sells educational toys. The last that I heard, they had 5 Coin Coaster, 5 Money Mixer, and 6 Treasure Twister left. Get them while they last. If you order them from there, remember to click the check box for "updates on your order", so you can learn when item was shipped, and things of that nature.
* www.dazzlingdiscoveries.com/
They had all three of these interlocking sets for $25 each, plus shipping. Each bank/coin sorter, was bought individually, and required the owner to build them. No tools, or batteries required. Once built they could also link together. Each had their own coin sorting tubes. If you don't want to use the coin sorter tubes, you can just link the mechanics together, and create a {hand cranked} perpetual motion machine, which require at least four sets to complete a single loop. The sets were also patented all under the same Patent number 6267663. While the gears, base, crank, clips, pins, and coin catch trays for the tubes, are all the same, the main structure of each set is different.
Plastic clips and plastic pins keep the mechanisms together. However because of the small pieces the toys are not recommended for ages under 3 years old. They are meant to be played with by people 6 years of age and older. When taking them apart, to put back into the box, I suggest using a clicking pen. So the pins can be pushed out, without fear of a metal tool breaking the parts.
The plastic collection tubes can also be used with preformed paper tubes, to sort and count the coins. However no paper coin tubes were included in the sets. The plastic coin tubes have a bulge at their bottoms that allow the paper tubes to be inserted, and a cut out near the bottom of the plastic tubes to push out the filled paper tubes.
#MagNif #Mag-NifInc #MagNifInc #BuildABank #CoinCoaster #MoneyMixer #TreasureTwister #DazzlingDiscoveries #STEM #ConstructionKit #ConstructionKit #Model #Bank #DoItYourSelf #Hobby #Toy #Education #Money #CoinSorter #CoinSorting #Puzzles #Puzzle #Toys #Games #Game
Here are some of my newest additions to my puzzle collection. Although technically not puzzles. They are model kit/construction kits. These "Build-A-Bank" kits were made by Mag-Nif Inc. in 2001. This set includes "Coin Coaster", "Money Mixer", "Treasure Twister". A fourth item, the "Sort-A-Saurus", was also released but, did not connect to these. Instead it was a triceratops with sorting device that dropped coins into its legs.
Mag-Nif Inc. seemed to have gone out of business a few years ago, as such these have gotten harder to find, on sites like Amazon, and ebay. But, I found these for sale on a site called;
Dazzling Discoveries, a "science, technology, engineering and mathematics" STEM educational company, which also operates a store, that sells educational toys. The last that I heard, they had 5 Coin Coaster, 5 Money Mixer, and 6 Treasure Twister left. Get them while they last. If you order them from there, remember to click the check box for "updates on your order", so you can learn when item was shipped, and things of that nature.
* www.dazzlingdiscoveries.com/
They had all three of these interlocking sets for $25 each, plus shipping. Each bank/coin sorter, was bought individually, and required the owner to build them. No tools, or batteries required. Once built they could also link together. Each had their own coin sorting tubes. If you don't want to use the coin sorter tubes, you can just link the mechanics together, and create a {hand cranked} perpetual motion machine, which require at least four sets to complete a single loop. The sets were also patented all under the same Patent number 6267663. While the gears, base, crank, clips, pins, and coin catch trays for the tubes, are all the same, the main structure of each set is different.
Plastic clips and plastic pins keep the mechanisms together. However because of the small pieces the toys are not recommended for ages under 3 years old. They are meant to be played with by people 6 years of age and older. When taking them apart, to put back into the box, I suggest using a clicking pen. So the pins can be pushed out, without fear of a metal tool breaking the parts.
The plastic collection tubes can also be used with preformed paper tubes, to sort and count the coins. However no paper coin tubes were included in the sets. The plastic coin tubes have a bulge at their bottoms that allow the paper tubes to be inserted, and a cut out near the bottom of the plastic tubes to push out the filled paper tubes.
#MagNif #Mag-NifInc #MagNifInc #BuildABank #CoinCoaster #MoneyMixer #TreasureTwister #DazzlingDiscoveries #STEM #ConstructionKit #ConstructionKit #Model #Bank #DoItYourSelf #Hobby #Toy #Education #Money #CoinSorter #CoinSorting #Puzzles #Puzzle #Toys #Games #Game