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| |  | NCR 7780/iTran Supplies | Home » » » » » Royal Sovereign FS-2 Fast Electronic Coin Sorter, Pennies Through Quarters | | | | | | | Description: | | This electric sorter features two-row capacity for each denomination. Heavy-duty motor sorts up to 312 coins per minute. Wide mouth and anti-jamming design facilitate more accurate sorting. Tubes are manufactured to use standard wrappers (sold separately) and lift out for easy access. Handles high volumes of change efficiently and quickly. | | | Features: | |
• This dual-row electric counter sorts up to 312 coins per minute into standard roll wrappers (sold separately).
• Two-row capacity for each denomination.
• Heavy duty motor sorts up to 312 coins per minute.
• Wide mouth and anti-jamming design.
• Tubes use standard wrappers.
| | | Product Details: | | | Product Length:
| 11.2 inches | | Product Width:
| 9.5 inches | | Product Height:
| 6.8 inches | | Product Weight:
| 0.0 pounds | | Package Length:
| 12.3 inches | | Package Width:
| 10.7 inches | | Package Height:
| 8.1 inches | | Package Weight:
| 5.45 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 7 reviews |
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List Price:
| $129.00 | |
Our Price:
| $109.99 | |
You Save:
| $19.01 (15%)
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| | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 7 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 30 found the following review helpful:
Good but not perfectApr 14, 2007
By Brian H Coin sorters have become an essential part of my daily routine. I pay exclusively by credit card or paper money and bring home the change to be recycled. I never have to bring coins with me.
Initially I was disappointed with this model. It did not have an auto start feature - something easy enough to design and basic to the cheaper battery operated ones I'm used to. You have to turn the machine on before dumping the coins in. I had great difficulty turning the machine on because the switch was stuck. I ended up forcing it on before I figured out that the sliding tray must align just right for the switch to work properly. The tray does not align easily due to design tolerances in the cheap molded plastic.
I have never seen a coin sorter that can produce an accurate coin count all the time, including the industrial strength ones at Vegas (watch them recycle the coins until they get the same count twice). Therefore, I opted out of the higher model with 3 rows and a running count readout. Think about it, unless you're a little kid counting his life savings, why do you need the machine to tell you how much loose change you have? So I bought the 2 row model, thinking that when one tube was full, the machine would somehow know to start filling the 2nd row automatically. Wrong! You have to manually pull the tray forward to start filling the second row. Do not fill the back row 1st because the front row (closest to you as you face the machine) sits higher and the coins will start piling up and fall behind the tubes - one of those take the tubes out and turn the machine upside down experiences. As such, the 2 and 3 row sorter has no advantage over the 1 row sorter. Just let the extra coins fall into the overflow tray, stop the machine, empty the full tube, and dump the extra coins back in.
Another quirk about the 2 row design is that all the tubes in a row move in tandum (e.g., the quarters do not move separately from the dimes, nickels, and pennies). So, for example, if the quarters fill first and you pull the row forward, the other denominations will have only partially filled tubes while the tubes in the back start filling also. I feel like I'm missing something about how this machine is supposed to work.
In spite of the claims, you will not be able to tell if you have one coin extra in the coin tubes because they are not precision cut. The old binary test does the trick - pull the coins out and make 2 equal stacks. If one stack has an extra coin, pull this out before putting the coins back into the tube to be wrapped. Along these lines, forget about putting the premolded wrappers into the tube beforehand. This has never worked and never will. Just use them up, switch to the free folded ones from the bank, and slide the wrapper over the coins after the tube is full. No big deal.
Even though it's called Fast Sort, it's slow compared to my cheapie battery operated ones, but I take that to mean slow turning = more torque = no jamming.
In spite of all the negatives, I still think it's a pretty good machine. I use it every other day, so I need a heavy duty AC operated machine. The other ones I've had ate too many batteries and jammed too easily. This machine has never jammed, but on one occasion (see above) some coins fell behind the coin tubes so I had to pull all the tubes out and turn the machine upside down to shake them out.
No machine is perfect, but I don't think you'll find a better one for casual home use (but get the 1 row sorter).
24 of 24 found the following review helpful:
Beats Coinstar FeesNov 20, 2006
By Spyce After shelling out to many dollars for Coinstar fees, I decided to purchase a coin counter. I save a lot of change and decided on this one because it has three rows of counters versus one. I tried using it with the wrappers inserted but didn't feel confident that the coins were going into the proper slots so I started using it without the wrappers. Filling the wrappers manually is an easy task since the open end of the wrapper will fit into the tube. Also, when using the wrappers, the counter would say that the proper amount had been deposited into a particular slot but when I removed that slot it obviously wasn't full. It's easier just to use it without the wrappers, that way you can see what's inside each slot and see that it's full.
I have already recovered a third of the cost of this counter by not using Coinstar.
5 of 5 found the following review helpful:
great little machineMay 10, 2008
By Vic I got it as a present for my boyfriend. He absolutely loved it and is still happily using it years later.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Not A Good InvestmentApr 07, 2010
By Annie Dallett Before I purchased this, I read all the reviews and compared the different machines. That method usually works for me, but not this time.
The quarters continually jammed in the exit slot which required the machine to be turned off and completely emptied. When you power off the unit, any coins still in the sleeves are no longer considered as dispensed. That means the machine treats the coin sleeves as empty. It will keep dropping that coin until it has dispensed the amount needed to fill an empty coin sleeve. If you do not empty the partial sleeves it will keep dropping change like a slot machine.
It also kept dropping pennies into the nickel sleeve. After emptying each nickel roll, I found at least two pennies in each. It over filled the pennies.
As with anything mechanical, I expected an occasional jam. However, this was constant. Plus, the need to check each roll after it was filled doubled the work. I do not recommend this unit at all.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Wonderful giftOct 16, 2009
By oceanlover I bought this for my husband two years ago and he loves it. However, I wish we would have read a previous reviewer because when things got stuck, he didn't understand what was happening and he burned the motor out. I am back for another one however, because he loves this machine and we know what to watch out for now.
See all 7 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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