💸 Count on Convenience!
The MMF Industries Coin Sorter Tubes are a set of four durable, color-coded tubes designed for efficient coin counting and sorting. Ideal for banks and retailers, these tubes conform to Federal Reserve standards and feature large funnels for easy loading into wrappers.
P**P
Not accurate
I’ve used a set made in USA from the same manufacturer that was spot on. They outsourced production to China and now the accuracy is pathetic. As you can see in the photos, only the nickel is accurate. I had to cut down the slot in the penny and dime to make it accurate.
J**P
A winner
Although not "hardened" against the potential for mis-stacking, these well-engineered gadgets work beautifully if coins are rapidly BUT SINGLY inserted into the entry chute (twosies work if you're not pushing too hard trying to make a high speed machine sorter of it.) Think of "one-at-a-time-fast-as-you-can." The flat side of the entry funnel slips perfectly against a table edge, making coin insertion efficient and fast. (Use the funnel - don't try to drop coins directly into the tube, as that method may introduce stacking errors.) The side slots make counting unnecessary.Inserting and removing wrappers takes a bit of finesse, learned easily enough over the course of a little practice. In any event, they're much faster and easier than trying to stuff wrappers with no mechanical aids. I did order the same manufacturer's coin wrappers as a precaution against dimensional interferences.The system is probably impractical for a business application wherein coin management is a daily routine of some magnitude, but is perfect, in my view, for the person (such as myself) who suddenly discovers that he's saved a pile of change over the years and needs to segregate it into rolls of known value without wasting a day in the doing of it. I've stored the remainder coins right in the sorters laid on their sides, with a slightly (and temporarily) deformed wrapper inserted last in each one so as to prevent spillage.But for the need to practice with wrappers, and the absence of wrapper-end folding instructions (neither of which is critical), I'd have given this system five stars.
B**R
Speeds things up
It’s great for quickly dividing coins so you don’t have to sort one coin at a time. A few things I wish could change however: 1. I wish it was a little bit bigger because it’s only 5x5 so if you happened to dump more than 25 quarters in the top tray, it’ll be too much and the other coins can’t fall through. 2. The trays need to “click” together better. The trays kind of just stack/sit on each other, so one wrong move and they easily disconnect from each other. 3. One more thing, it would be cool if they came in different color options.
G**Y
It works
A little clumsy at times but got the huge job, 5 gal jug full, done on the cheap.
B**0
Works well, use small handfuls
I bought this to sort a few gallons of loose change. It works surprisingly well and its quick, but as some others have posted it is not a high-throughput commercial machine. If you use small handfulls of change, it sorts them really quick. But as others have commented, if you put in too much change at once, it slows down and can quickly get to the point of being 'clogged', where the smaller coins can't drop through. However, I found that it is really fast with small amounts, and it processes many small handfulls of change much faster than the same total volume of change in fewer large batches. In fact, the larger the batch the slower it goes. I also found that using a circular shaking motion (as opposed to just left-right or back and forth) tends to help. But they're sturdy, the holes are exactly the right size, and its easy to use.
J**S
Of course TD bank got rid of their coin machines ...
Of course TD bank got rid of their coin machines a month before I decided to cash in 4 years worth of loose change....These tubes made short work of counting and wrapping. I used the free wrappers TD bank gave me, I thought they might be tough to use as they were not preformed and came flat. However after a little practice with the first 2 attempts I got the hang of it. Now it literally takes just a few seconds to get the stack of coins in the wrapper and wrapped up. I open one end slide it into the tube and jiggle it as far as it will go. Then I use my finger to block the hole and turn it over. Give it a small shake and they slide neatly in.I had counted the first of each tube and they were all accurate, didn't bother counting after that. If there is a coin that is half way above the slit, that one is extra.
K**T
Works Great!
Accurately and easily stacks the coins in proper amounts for transfer to rolls. I recommend using the pre-rounded coin rolls....very easy transfer. I rolled $180 worth of coin in 1bout 1.5 hours.
J**N
Go for it. They work fine and are good, low-cost solution
Maybe I'm weird, but these were enjoyable to use. I separated over $700 worth of coins in a single evening. Like others have mentioned, it goes fastest when you use just a single handful of coins at a time. I set up 4 separate shoe boxes in a line, with quarters nearest me, then nickels, then pennies then dimes. When you empty the quarter tray, put it down upside down, then after emptying the nickel tray, put that down upside down on top of the quarter tray, then penny tray, then dime. Then you can just grab all four trays and flip them over to start with the next handful of coins. If you have a lot of pennies the last separator tray can be tedious because the pennies tend to block the holes for the dimes. Just use your fingers to move them around on that last tray, pushing the dimes through the holes. Shaking the tray makes a bit of noise, so go into a room and close the door so that your wife doesn't attack you with a blunt object.
S**D
A Canadian version would be nice.
Simple, easy and works. Unfortunately this is made for American coins. Still it works for Canadian coins as well. Just that there are no trays for loonies and toonies. Also a tray for pennies which doesn’t do us Canadians any good anymore. Still worth it. I’ve searched for Canadian coin sorters that don’t cost several hundred dollars and I can’t find any.
L**E
Why pennies?
Canada hasn't used pennies since 2012. Why does one of the trays sort for pennies? The top shelf ends up collecting all of the quarters, loonies and toonies... Wish there was a true Canadian coin sorter. :(
C**E
PAS BON POUR PIECES DE MONAIES CANAFIENNE
PAS BON POUR PIECES DE MONAIES CANAFIENNE
M**O
It works
It needs a deeper bottom shelf. Isn't the best version of this product i've ever used. But it's basically decent.
B**R
Makes it a lot easier
It doesn't sort Canadian coins per say but it helps sort the change for sorting and makes the process much easier than doing it by hand.
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