• Reviews around coin (1.84 of 5)

    Royal Sovereign Electric Coin Counter, 2 Rows of Coin Counting, Patented Anti-Jam Technology, Digital Coin Counting Display (FS-2D)

    • This unit may work for you if all your coins are fresh from the mint and you never count more than $20 a month.
    • I was just simply dumping too many coins in at once
    • This coin sorter jammed the second time we tried to feed pennies through it
    • I noticed nickels falling into the quarter tubes, and the machine is supposed to tell you when the correct coin count has filled a tube so you can slide the second tube into place
    • Awesome coin sorter.
    • Worked beautifully, jammed a couple of times but that was my fault (a Canadian coin and a couple of coins glued together).
    • What happened was the coins would displace the tubes and knock it out of place slightly causing the machine to stop
    • simply put the wrappers in the tubes and dumped the coins in and turn it on
    • Unlike many better machines, this requires a lot of manual intervention, from having to move tubes around as soon as one is full to having to dig around when coins get jammed.
    • works good, sometimes shuts off and forgets how many coins it dumped
    • Well after plugging it in and using it, he has found it to be the best coin sorter ever.
    • Un-jamming is a big hassle, the screw for the hopper needs a coin to unscrew, and the door doesn't open far enough to make clearing jammed coins very easy without a set of tweezers
    • Do you like sorting coins by hand
    • The machine doesn't separate out odd sized coins or larger than quarters.
    • The only thing I wish this thing could do is have like a "Bank" button where it takes the money that's already wrapped and removed from the machine and subtract it from the total (it does notice that coins specifically that are removed off the counter like nickles that have been removed as subtracted from the nickle counter but still counted toward the total
    • Should an accidental jam occur the manufacturers have made it very simple to open up the hopper and remove the offending coin
    • The coin get stock don’t like this product
    • This is an excellent coin sorter
    • I had the hand crank version of this and it dumped coins in the wrong tubes.
    • Next time, I would probably go with a simpler contraption where I can slide the coins down a chute and they fall into the appropriate slot (most of the time)
    • first one broke after about 300 coins going through it
    • Spent more time trying to shake the coins that fell back down inside the machine as I had to get them all out for it to work again.
    • Great product, fast counting coins
    • I had reviewed some of the blogs prior to purchase, some of which were not favorable, but I thought this might work for our needs, However despite placing only a hand full of coins at a time this machine jammed up and started putting wrong coins in the coin tubes which of course then made the total count void.
    • Had a jam because of improper coins dropped in
    • At least with the pennies, when a coin roll is inserted, 50 coins exceeds the top of the roll and the plastic tube and inevitably fall out of the machine.
    • Afterwards, the coins got jammed up, the counter was wrong, and it was worthless
    • Another good investment if you want to have the "bank look" of your wrapped coins is the Twist-N-Crimp Coin Wrap Sealer coin crimper.
    • I had a few jams, mostly because I was simply dumping coins in from a large jug
    • My only picky criticisms are that coins, at times, didn't slide out from the sorting machine or it almost flew out of the tube when the tube was one coin away from being full (which occurred once or twice in the process of sorting 3k coins)
    • but maybe 1/4 are the machines inaccuracy, where a coin get caught in the machine until another coin knocks it thru
    • Had a little problem in the beginning with the coins going through you have to be vigilant when they fill up you need to make sure to pull out the slider remove the fall coin cartridge while the other one is filling otherwise it just starts spitting coins at you
    • and I still have a wonderful coin counter/roller for future projects.
    • So, if a coin happens to miss the tube, it does not know (happened rarely).
    • It never traps a coin and counts as it goes along.
    • Experience with previous counters taught me that feeding the coins rather than dumping a handful into the hopper works best.
    • It kept jamming and out wrong coins in wrong slot, miscounting
    • It processed the bigger coins the best but slowly.
    • Now there is some coin somewhere and it just doesn't work
    • At least with the pennies, when a coin roll is inserted, 50 coins exceeds the top of the roll and the plastic tube and inevitably fall out of the machine.
    • It's designed to easily get under the hopper to unjam it or remove inappropriate coins (regular screwdriver)
    • Another problem i noticed is that even if you clean up your coin and take all the debris away it will still stuck and you will have to stop the process of sorting it to fix