I've learned of some customer feedback making the rounds on Facebook regarding use of my new Cryptopay swipers.
A few people have pulled into an empty bay to find the meter running and "counting up" since the prior customer and credit card user didn't push the Stop button. Customers are speculating on social media whether the system will run forever if Stop is never pressed, essentially giving free car washes to each new person who pulls into the bay.
My pricing is $3 for 5 minutes. Max credit card charge is $10. I chose $10 since I have an oversize bay where trucks, large vehicles, boats, etc. come in to wash. So it won't run forever. And adding more signage about a max charge seems odd since the problem is caused by the customer not reading the signage in the first place. I am using the stock Cryptopay "count up" signs right adjacent to the swiper.
I'm thinking of adding a sign at the car wash street exit to prompt/remind customers to push the Stop button if they did not do that. Does anyone have any suggestions about other methods? Has anyone integrated a sensor so when the vehicle pulls out of the bay it electronically presses Stop. (I don't want to cut concrete for a loop detector though.)
Finally, I think part of this is the Cryptopay design. Unless you watch the bay timer very closely, there isn't really a good sensory input that the bay and credit card system is running. I got confused myself at first. When I first tried the system, the rotary switch was in the Stop position. I swiped my credit card and nothing happened (although it did turn the bay on, which I learned when I looked at the LED-7 timer.)
Perhaps I need a bright panel lamp, or blinking indicator light, that provides feedback that the equipment is on?
A few people have pulled into an empty bay to find the meter running and "counting up" since the prior customer and credit card user didn't push the Stop button. Customers are speculating on social media whether the system will run forever if Stop is never pressed, essentially giving free car washes to each new person who pulls into the bay.
My pricing is $3 for 5 minutes. Max credit card charge is $10. I chose $10 since I have an oversize bay where trucks, large vehicles, boats, etc. come in to wash. So it won't run forever. And adding more signage about a max charge seems odd since the problem is caused by the customer not reading the signage in the first place. I am using the stock Cryptopay "count up" signs right adjacent to the swiper.
I'm thinking of adding a sign at the car wash street exit to prompt/remind customers to push the Stop button if they did not do that. Does anyone have any suggestions about other methods? Has anyone integrated a sensor so when the vehicle pulls out of the bay it electronically presses Stop. (I don't want to cut concrete for a loop detector though.)
Finally, I think part of this is the Cryptopay design. Unless you watch the bay timer very closely, there isn't really a good sensory input that the bay and credit card system is running. I got confused myself at first. When I first tried the system, the rotary switch was in the Stop position. I swiped my credit card and nothing happened (although it did turn the bay on, which I learned when I looked at the LED-7 timer.)
Perhaps I need a bright panel lamp, or blinking indicator light, that provides feedback that the equipment is on?