Within a year of purchasing my wash in 2005, I installed an
American changer (dual hopper) dispensing $1
tokens. I had
tokens custom made, with a Sequoia tree design to match my wash, Sequoia Car Wash. I am pleased with the decision and it has worked well. I later added another
American changer on the back wall, along with an American credit-card-to-
token machine. My experience with all of this has been positive.
I bought a Shurvend glass front vendor, also put on the back wall facing the vacuums. This is the best piece of equipment I have if you measure revenue versus hassle factor. I put
vending products in, and take money out. I think I have had two maintenance issues with the Shurvend in nearly 10 years. I had to replace a coil (simple) and had to fix a sometimes-jamming
coin acceptor mechanism. Other than that, no problems at all.
Some people dislike
tokens and I respect that. But I try to push a $5 car wash, even though my start price is $3. I have gotten many positive comments from customers about the $1
tokens. A $5 bill change into quarters requires fiddling with 20
coins instead of 5, and introduces 20 times of possible
coin jams instead of 5. A bonus is money collection. I have small
coin vaults, so having 1
coin represent a dollar instead of 4 means I can be more flexible about money collection.
Personally, I admire and like the golden dollars when they are shiny and new. But I would never dispense them. I think those shiny dollar
coins being dispensed, and the thought of how many might still be remaining in the machine would represent a potential crime issue I don't want to worry about. btw, the Shurvend does dispense dollar
coins as change. If someone puts in a $10 bill and buys a $2 item, they get 8 gold dollars back.
Edit: I suggest having your
tokens nickel-plated. A few more cents per
coin, but they stay looking new virtually forever.