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| Hambo3:
Hi, First time poster. Was wondering if anyone has built or can offer some advise on making a coin door/mechanism. I've just completed my 1st (and probably last!) cabinet and getting into the whole 'Do it yourself' thing so really fancied having a go at 'literaly' making the whole thing myself, which includes the coin mech! I had some ideas but both have failed miserably now I'm a bit stuck. My 1st thought was to let the coin slide down a chute and hit a microswitch at the bottom but the coin (uk 10p) isnt heavy enough and just bounces off. My next idea was to replace the switch with 2 wires, one each side of the chute that the coin would pass between making the connection but the coin moves too fast and the connection is made too short to register. I also tried reducing the incline of the chute to slow it down but still produces random results. I'm thinking I may need to resort to electronics to resolve this one, hopefully not. Ideas? |
| PL1:
Welcome aboard, Hambo3. You might try a different switch like one of these. Another option is this 10p mech. Scott |
| EightBySix:
I tried to do the same thing. This was my attempt I discovered that a regular coin mech is really a coin reject mech, ensuring everything but the 10p is rejected. Then you just send a pulse if something gets through. You can also get coin switches. Like a microswitch with a wire attached to act as a lever |
| Hambo3:
Cheers for the info guys. Love that mech EightBySix. That switch looks interesting PL1. Now I know what to look for. Might try a combination of the 2! |
| Minwah:
If you decide to buy one as PL1 linked to, I just found this place that sell them (slightly cheaper): http://www.hazelelectronics.co.uk/mechanical_coin_mechanisms.htm I just bought one for myself, £35 delivered (inc VAT). |
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