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coinstar

What is with coinstar? how much do they charge you and has anyone had a good experience?
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NEVER LET HIPPO MOUTH OVERLOAD HUMMINGBIRD BUTT!!!
WORK HARDER!!!!
Millions on WELFARE depend on you!
I can think of a dozen reasons not to have high capacity magazines, but it's the reasons I haven't thought about that I need them.
Dump em in, print ticket, spend ticket at checkout counter like cash.
the 7.5% they charge me for their service is well worth skipping the trouble of counting and rolling the coins. Plus I "seed" the coinstar with a few Indians, Buffalos, to "give back to the hobby" and let someone have the excitement of finding something unusual in their change.
Of course, I also don't mind the fee Paypal charges for their service, either. My time is valuable, they save me inconvenience and trouble and I happily pay the fee.
I understand that some people don't want to pay for these services, and that is their right also.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
I love it that other people use them, though. I see many more older coins in circulation (silver, too!) than I used too.
Check out the Southern Gold Society
However, The Food Lion I shop at is also centrally located to say the disadvantaged group of folks as well, and I think they use it becuase they frankly dont have bank accounts, and its the only way to turn in large amounts of change. Same thing for the check cashing centers, they thrive in areas for the same reason.
<< <i>Coinstar charges an 8.9% processing fee in the United States, a 9.8% processing fee in Canada, and a 7.5% processing fee in the U.K. For our United States customers, this means you'll pay approximately 9 cents for every dollar of coins counted. Our customers tell us they are willing to pay a small service charge for the convenience and time-savings of not having to sort, count, roll and haul their coins to the bank. >>
Go BIG or GO HOME. ©Bill
NOTE: No trees were killed in the sending of this message. However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
Type collector since 1981
Current focus 1855 date type set
Next time you go to your bank get $100 in $1 bills. Go to the bathroom and start counting and throw every 10th one in the crapper and flush it cuz thats what yer doing when you use Coinstar.
Thats wut I tell my kids when they pay $18 ISF fee at the bank cuz they can't keep their checkbook balanced. Go withdraw $18 and flush it down the terlet cuz thats wut you got for your money.
Also when I take my change to the bank it is counted and deposited on the spot. I guess there is something good to be said for living 50 years behind the times.
Me, I take my coins to the casino. They love to take my money...
charge. Most slug rejectors are set to exclude silver coins or wrong diameter, or wrong weight
coins. Each denomination coin has a unique electronic signature and those which differ are
excluded. Otherwise they'd get lots of counterfeits, slugs, and foreign coins.
Everyone has his or her own reason for using this or any other "pay-for" service. I used to do quite a bit of traveling in and around London. I would hail a cab and off I'd go. A friend asked why I paid two-pounds for a taxi when it's only 20-pence to take the bus? I told him it was because I didn't want to wait for the bus and then STILL have to walk two-blocks to my destination. I paid for the convenience, it was worth it to me. Just as Coinstar is apparently worth something to someone or they wouldn't be in business.
Just my eversohumble opinion
Cheers,
Bob
I don't accumulate change. I try to use coins when paying for things, instead of using a big paper bill and getting lots of coins back in change. If I have enough coins for a few rolls or more, I wrap 'em and deposit them at my local bank. I love those people...nothing like the service of a small local bank.
2. My bank will count it free of charge if I deposit it into my account.
3. That $9 you are paying coinstar to count your $100 in change could go for a lottery ticket that COULD MAKE YOU A MULTI-MILLIONAIR!!!
Jim
<< <i>Why drop your money in one of their machines when you can go to the bank and keep all of your money and not pay the fee. >>
Because my bank doesn't have a coin counting machine? Because they don't accept deposits of coins unless they're rolled? Stop being so provincial -- TWIAVBP and different locations have different services.
<< <i>So do you have to write your name and number on the roll in case it comes up short? Or do they just take the loss? Seems like it would be easy to roll up a bunch of slugs or knockout tabs and pass them off as coins. Then again I can't picture why a bank would not have a counting machine. >>
Last time I took a bunch of rolls to the bank -- and it was about ten years ago -- I did indeed have to write my name and my account number on every roll. Huge PITA. While my branch doesn't have a counting machine, there must be one somewhere because it did turn out that my count was not correct -- they added 25c to my account
As to why a bank wouldn't have a counting machine -- I don't know either. But at least out here in California, it does seem that few do. Maybe they're in cahoots with CoinStar? (There's some good conspiratorial fodder for you!)
I'm sure they all do, but whether they use it for this purpose or not is another matter.
For me I would just quit accumulating change.