With this method Can I avoid counting other metals as coins?I agree with Hymie. Height / width / total occluded area. With a broad light source such as an LED behind a piece of frosted plastic, and an unfocused photo transistor, each coin will have a distinctive shadow pattern as it passes through the light, producing a (hopefully) unique voltage output for each coin diameter.
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Thank you so much!If whatever rolls down the coin race, and then produces the same beam-breakage signature/time signal as a genuine coin, then it will not discriminate between the two.
But for this to occur, the two coin disks would need to be the same diameter.
I think that a strong permanent magnet near the coin path can change the speed the coin rolls. If so, coins of different materials roll at different speeds.With this method Can I avoid counting other metals as coins?
If you allow each coin to roll downwards, within a narrow straight path, appropriately sized tubes will allow the coins to drop in the order of increasing diameter ... dimes first, pennies, nickels, and then quarters. Set up a reed switch or similar device in each tube to count individual coins. This might require some adjustment of the specific drop opening measurements, but the scheme does work ... It is commercially produced in a manual non-electronic version.
This device was manufactured as the 'Sort-n-Save Bank'.