I really hope that you’ve got your electrical shock issues taken care of. The back of your
coin box looks like something that was made in a high school metal shop. I don’t see any UL or ETL certification stickers. In Washington State you can’t operate any equipment without UL or ETL certification, if you do it’ll nullify your insurance.
On another note. There was a car wash operator here who installed a new bill
changer and when his guys went to plug it in they found that the electrical receptacle was a ungrounded 2 prong receptacle, so they cut off the grounding pin from the
changer plug and plugged in the Bill
changer, now the bill
changer is ungrounded. Over time the wiring harness got worn and the 110 volt power lead that operates the stacker came out of the plug that plugs into the stacker. Instead of replacing the damaged, worn out harnessing they used a bent paper chip to push in the wire so the stacker would operate. The paper would fall over and just barely lay against the stacker case, every time the stacker would cycle 110 volt would go to ground, if someone was torching the bill
changer they would get a good shock, they still didn’t fix the problem. One day a guy with wet hands used the bill
changer and got shocked so bad that he couldn’t use his arm for a few hours, he was lucky he wasn’t killed. It got real ugly and the guy ended up taking legal action against the car wash, the car wash is owned by someone else now. So there is a reason for electrical codes, UL/ETL certifications. You need to take electrical problems very seriously.