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« on: February 21, 2004, 03:57:06 pm » |
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I've got a coinco 75-9800 in my cavalier. The changer is set for 25 cents, and most times works fine. Once in a while, when you drop a quarter in, it still releases the bottle, but also will give you change until it runs out of nickels (sounds like a slot machine). Is there a fix to this, or it is rebuild/replace time?
Thanks! Jeff
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Pat Pixley
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« Reply #1 on: February 21, 2004, 09:21:24 pm » |
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have you cleaned that coinco 75 9800 out. checked to make sure nothing is sticking or jammed up . Going through the manual it give a couple of things Defective Motor Pulse switch or replace logic board. That is why I say give it a good cleaning first. ?
Pat P.
P.S. what kind of Coinco S75-9800A or S75-9800B also let me know if you would like a copy of the manual I have one right from coinco .
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johnieG
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« Reply #2 on: February 21, 2004, 09:35:51 pm » |
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It's either a defective motor pulse switch (that counts the payout motors rotation/cycle,) or a defective logic board check for a stuck/loose/cracked microswitch, loose wires/connectors going to the switch, if they seem ok, then looks like it's time for a new logic board (from a doner unit, or other source) or replace the mech ( keeping yours for spare parts) '>
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Spoon-feeding Newbies since 2001... Yeah..220,221 whatever it takes. Remember, all it needs is a shot of Freon! The Vendo V-83 is the '59 Edsel of the coke machine world. ;p Spray painting does NOT restore a compressor 11 is louder than 10... "Hope" is good, but it's not an action plan.
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Pat Pixley
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« Reply #3 on: February 21, 2004, 09:56:59 pm » |
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Jay I could not find any thing in Oklahoma but there's a couple of numbers for Texas for Coin Acceptors one in Dallas 2936 Reward Lane Dallas Tx Ph. 214-358-5605 and 2001 Karbach St Unit A Houston Tx Ph713-683-6558 ( I hope they have not change there numbers this manual is over 10 yr. old )
Pat P. '>
P.S. There is also Missouri 5006 Daggett Ave. St. Louis Ph. 314-531-7662 I hope this helps.
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johnieG
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« Reply #4 on: February 22, 2004, 10:17:49 am » |
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an dhere's a link to their web page,,,, http://www.coinco.com/coin/
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Spoon-feeding Newbies since 2001... Yeah..220,221 whatever it takes. Remember, all it needs is a shot of Freon! The Vendo V-83 is the '59 Edsel of the coke machine world. ;p Spray painting does NOT restore a compressor 11 is louder than 10... "Hope" is good, but it's not an action plan.
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Guest
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« Reply #5 on: February 26, 2004, 12:34:26 pm » |
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Thanks for everybody for the help. I found corrosion in the electrical connections for the change dispenser. I'll try to fix this mess later, just ordered a 'reconditioned' one from premier vendors. $30 inc. shipping, hope it works right!
By the way, it is a 9800B
Bonus question for future reference, will a 9800A interchange? What is the difference between the two?
Jeff
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johnieG
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« Reply #6 on: February 26, 2004, 11:15:20 pm » |
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Basically it's the price settings/switches & printed circut board (electronic-logic board) the "A" has four switches & can go up to 75-Cents, while the "B" has 5 switches & can be set up to $1.85. Although the two logic boards look different, they are in fact interchangable between the two models ( "A" & "B" ) in regards to function, (but not pricing-range obviously)
Also the "B" has a plastic molded coin-reject path cover & the "A" has a metal one covering it's "reject" path
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Spoon-feeding Newbies since 2001... Yeah..220,221 whatever it takes. Remember, all it needs is a shot of Freon! The Vendo V-83 is the '59 Edsel of the coke machine world. ;p Spray painting does NOT restore a compressor 11 is louder than 10... "Hope" is good, but it's not an action plan.
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joesquid
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« Reply #7 on: April 05, 2004, 12:30:00 pm » |
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One other thing I'd check is the .25 switch. I had one that started going spuriously bad. It would send erratic signals to the circuit board, in essence looking like quarters were constantly activating the switch. The coin unit was set for .10 so the payout motor would continually run paying out change. Use a multimeter to check resistance across the switch. If it jumps between infinite and 0 (or anywhere under 100 ohms) without being actuated, it's bad and needs to be replaced.
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Eric "Joe Squid" Johnson
1955 Vendo 23 - awaiting restoration 1959 Westinghouse WC-44SK - awaiting parts 1967 Cavalier CS-64G - functional in house 1969 Vendo 63 - in restoration
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