Dirt Buster
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The answer to your question is NO. If you install a Mars validator in a Goldline ACW your Hamilton Tokenotes will not work. But you can use the Mars coupons, there are a couple of problems with the Mars coupons, they are very expensive and the Mars validator sees them as cash. I've installed many Mars validators in Hamilton equipment but they do have a few draw backs, but overall they work very well.
Randy, do you think the XE works just as good in the goldline?The answer to your question is NO. If you install a Mars validator in a Goldline ACW your Hamilton Tokenotes will not work. But you can use the Mars coupons, there are a couple of problems with the Mars coupons, they are very expensive and the Mars validator sees them as cash. I've installed many Mars validators in Hamilton equipment but they do have a few draw backs, but overall they work very well.
Thats really interesting. I was thinking it was a different reason. But that’s nice to know what is going on.I've never tried it, but I think I can get a Mars validator to fool the Hamilton controller into thinking the Mars coupon is a Hamilton Tokenote. Mars validators only output a single pulse per dollar, and their coupons can be any dollar value. The Goldline will only see it as cash in. Hamilton Tokenotes trigger a combination of $1 and $5 pulses that the controller reads however it's programmed. It might still require an XE or STA validator to program, but by using a programmable relay I could intercept the Mars pulse output and have the relay convert it to a Tokenote signal.
The Mars coupons are very expensive, something like a dollar each until you're ordering quantities of 10,000 or more.
That would be correct. The only coupons that Mars have have a value of $1 and $5So there are no Mars coupons that are for any value other than $1 or $5?
Yeah i'd be curious if you try it and make it workAs I said, I haven't tried it, but I have tested a Hamilton validator with Tokenotes and watched it pulse a combination of $1 and $5 signals. I'm sure I could capture oddball-number bill pulses from a Mars validator coupon and have a programmable relay output a Tokenote signal. There's no reason for it to not work.