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Cassida C200 Coin Sorter, Counter and Roller

  • Based on 2,353 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Friday, May 24
Order within 6 hours and 27 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Style: C200


Features

  • [ALL-IN-ONE]: An all-in-one solution for any coin handling need. It recognizes, counts, sorts and wraps coins (1, 5, 10, 25 and dollar). Includes bins and plastic coin tubes for each denomination in order to facilitate and speed up the process
  • [EFFICIENT and ACCURATE]: The Cassida C200 accurately processes all U.S. coins (Pennies, Nickels, Dimes, Quarters and Dollar Coins) at a speed of 300 coins per minute with a hopper capacity of 2,000 coins and a bin capacity of 900 coins
  • [CONVENIENT]: Coin tube attachments and wrappers included to fill preformed coin wrappers automatically and easily. Simply place the coin wrappers into the tubes, press and hold + to set automatically for rolls and press start to watch them fill up
  • [EASY REPORTING]: With the easy-to-read LED screen, see the total value of coins counted and the value by denomination by pressing the report button

Manufacturer: ‎Cassida Corporation


Brand: ‎Cassida


Item Weight: ‎12 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎10.8 x 11.2 x 10.2 inches


Item model number: ‎C200


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Color: ‎Black


Material Type: ‎Plastic


Number of Items: ‎1


Size: ‎Letter


Manufacturer Part Number: ‎C200


Domestic Shipping: Item can be shipped within U.S.


Date First Available: May 19, 2011


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, May 24

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Makes closing register tills a breeze!!!
Style: C300
We have a conference in which we sell books and have registers. We usually have about 7 registers open at one time and at the end of every night we need to count the tills and sales and pull the money from the registers. We used to count the till change by hand, which took us over an hour to count all 7 registers when all you want to do is go home. We have a 3 point check so the change gets counted 3 times so counting change by hand was a slow, tedious process that sometimes was made longer by human error and the need to count more than than the 3 times. Once we got this machine it cut our counting time in half if not more. We spend only 30 minutes counting all 7 tills. The change machine is fast, effective and accurate. Now to the machine itself. The rotating blade where the change is placed and turned to be sorted is somewhat slow as it rotates at a rate which may seem slow at first, but it can sort a whole tray of coins in less than a minute. It sounds slow, but it's actually a fast process. You can also push the coins a little over the rotating tumbler if you feel its rotating slowly. This does not affect the sorting process, only pushes the coins down the sorting hole faster. This machine is equipped with a printing function which is a GODSEND. We love this printout. We have multiple people using this one counting machine so for them to be able to printout a report of the change makes going between groups that much quicker. No one has to sit there and write down the change numbers. They simply attach a coin counting printer and with a press of the button the report will print. It's fantastic. This is by far the best feature of the machine. The machine sorts by size so the trays do not sit in numerical order, e.g. $1, .25, .10, .05, .01; but rather it goes by size so the 1 cent comes before the 5 cents which is just something we had to get used to when dumping the coins back into our till trays. It's a slight annoyance but not enough to not want to use the machine. Another thing to note, the machine does not discriminate between foreign currency and US currency. So if you have a foreign currency that is the same size as a penny, it will be sorted with the pennies. I tried this machine with some foreign currency that we had and for the most part anything that was odd sized or shaped ended up in the $1 tray, but if there was a coin that was the same size and shape as the other US coins, it sorted into those trays. We have only used the tray functionality, and not the coin wrappers; however, the idea that we could roll coins easily is fantastic. I cannot attest to the ease of this feature however. You can set the machine's functionality to sort the different denominations to a certain dollar amount; meaning you can set pennies to only sort up to $0.50 which is the amount of a penny roll. The machine will stop sorting the pennies until you stop and reset the sorter. This goes for all the other denominations. This makes rolling the coins very easy. Again, we haven't used the rolling feature, but it is nice to be able to have in case we do use it in the future. The carrying handle is convenient if you ever need to move it; it is heavy but not too heavy to carry. Definitely recommend this if you are counting a lot of change. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 26, 2023 by Grace P.

  • Stay Away From Dimes
Style: C300
I coin roll hunt between $2-$3K worth every single week - all denominations. So now having this thing for several months, I can offer my thoughts. If you are simply counting your change, it's 99% accurate. The occasional dime or penny will be dropped into the wrong slot and miscounted. Not a huge deal. If you are using the preformed wrappers, the quarters and dollars will fill at a 99% rate of accuracy. The nickels are at around 95%, the pennies are around 85-90% (with good wrappers; 75% or less otherwise), and dimes are barely at 50% accuracy regardless of the wrappers you use. Also, with nickels/quarters/dollars, you can fill the hopper up pretty much to the brim and you won't run into any issues with jamming. With pennies, you gotta keep it around halfway up the hopper to stay running smoothly. However, dimes will force you into an early grave from frustration. If you dump more than a handful in at a time, you will only run smoothly some of the times. The dimes get caught in the wheel (spindle?) and jam it up. You have to pull the back panel off - which is super easy thankfully - and dislodge the culprit. This will happen repeatedly if counting a lot of dimes. The other issue with dimes is the actual wrapping part. I've used 3 different brands and they all have the same issue: clogging up and spilling over. And because dimes are so dang small, having to pick them up off the floor or from wherever else they roll to, is a headache. You will end up hand-wrapping them in the end...Overall, this is a nice unit for the price. Just don't plan on using it for dimes. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 22, 2023 by Eric Cory

  • WOW AM I FRIGGEN IMPRESSEDDDDD!!!!!!!
Style: C200
Went for a cheaper model and found this one instead cuz the old one had been discontinued. Prayed about it and realized this was going to be a good investment. First off. Tech support was awesome before and after I bought it. I had lots of questions because if I was gunna put down this much cash I wanted to make sure it was going to do what I wanted it to do. First off should let you know I was buying the cheaper 'kids toys' for years and could have bought one of these and then some for the numbers that broke. I do what is called 'coin roll hunting' where you get coins rolls from the bank, break em open, go through them and look for cool stuff and then pull em out. Silver quarters, silver dimes. wheat cents, etc... Well you can go through a LOT of change that way. So some notes: 1) You can fill the hopper and keep going and gonig. Only makes a mistake once in a very long while. I ran the same 80$s worth of mixed change through it over and over again and it was always accurate to within one coin mostly exactly, once or twice +/- 1, usually a dime. 2) You can put the bins in and collect the coins in piles or put the tubes in and do it by tubes. 3) With the bins the bins are rearrangeable with two sizes, large and small. In the default configuration sadly the penny is a small so it can fill pretty fast if your like me gong through tons of pennies, however I have a solution for that in a minute. 4) You can set the 'batch size' where you tell it how many to count OF EACH TYPE DIFFERENT before it stops. Then when it stops it tells you which one was full. This is great for when you set different bin sizes or use tubes or mix. There is a way to set it to the default tube sizes (as in for rolling for the bank) so you dont have to do those by hand. Sadly there is no default setting for the bins so you gotta bunch those by hand. I default to 300 since thats teh minimum for all of them so I dont have to memorize for each bin. (It tells you in the booklet). 5) The tubes are designed to take the shotgun tubes which is fine. But I prefer the flat wrappers because you can get 1000 for 7 dollars and keep them in the tiny box they come in versus paying 10 times that and taking up so much space. Sadly though you have to do some modification for that. There are slots at the bottom of the tubes (you can see them in the picture where the wrapper shows through) where if you dont cover the slot and your not using a preformed tube, the coin will bounce out. I took some extra quarter wrappers and wrapped them around the tubes at the bottom so they wouldnt pop out. Viola fix. Now all you have to do is fill it to the right max and then take the flat wrapper and dump it in. Sadly the tubes are a dark grey so you need rally good light to make sure its all inside the wrapper and you didnt miss any and have them fall on the floor. 6) NOW MY NEAT HACK!! I have one of those penny contraptions that sorts the pennies by copper vsus not copper (The copper in a pre 1983 penny is worth twice the penny itself. Tho currently its illeage to melt down the pennies that ban is supposed to be lifted in the next 5 to 10 years when they stop minting pennies. Its the new fad but I just do it for fun.) So anyway I am making a system to feed it directly into the sorter I designe from a kit and so I what I did was a bought an extra set of tubes. (5 dollars are tube from the company, bit expensive but worth it for me) and dremeled off the ends. NOW I can sort them into whatever bucket/pouch/whatever I like and not have to be limited by the tubes/bins. I tested this by putting a large dishpan underneath it and ran the 80 dollar test batch through it. OH NEAT TRICK. BATCH ZERO IS DONT STOP. If you set it to zero it doesnt stop unless you hit the stop button. So I ran my 80$s through it non stop into the dishpan and it was just fine. My friend is bringing over his penny jar, a half or so home depot bucket of pennies that we are going to dump through it so I cacn count it and buy them off him for my project. With my hacked tube for the pennies I can just keep dumping them in and have them spit out into my own container and give him back his bucket. Counts fine too so I can give him cash. One side note though is you do need to make sure its empty when you turn it on cuz it spits out the first few as a self test. Doesnt seem to be a problem though. I ran it with wha was left in the hopper after that just fine. Also there is a hatch on the back that is for getting jams out and I'm not entirely sure how it works. Hasnt jammed so far but I am careful to check for things like paper clips and staples and what not. The hatch is VERY hard to get off and I suspect you would have to til the machine a lot to get something out so I dont know i that means if it jam jams you have to dump all the coins out, or if it will get stuck in the machine or what. Hope I never have to find out!! There is a anti-jam process it goes through which I dont know how it works but its mentioned in the manul and one time it made this horrible grinding sound which was mentioned and then it was fine. So I guess maybe it does some massive vibration thing to shake things loose. Thats it! I ran 100 dollars of quarters and dimes through ti roll em and it was wonderful. The quarers were from shotgun tubes and the dimes were flat wrappers (You can NOT put the flat ones directly in the tubes). ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on June 25, 2014 by Bob Sch.

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