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I was thinking about the problem of the 70p coin. The problem is two coins need to be hybridized. Money with holes is nothing new. What is needed is holes in the coins big enough to fit other coins into. I propose that coins be made with holes allowing concentric concatenization of coins. The 25c
quarter would have a hole big enough to allow a dime, making a 35c coin, good for a phone call. The 50c would have a hole for a 25c coin, thus allowing 75c coin or 85c if the dime is included. Variations of this could be done for other coinage, allowing the 70p bus coin to be made from 2 coins of lesser value.
Other benefits - the nice open coins would make fabulous necklaces.
Drawbacks - only very round things could be depicted on coins. Except for the smallest, most central coins. Probably several versions would be necessary for the smallest coin, to allow the various presidents equal time. This would not be a problem in Britain, where it is always the queen on there.
Connecting Coins
http://www.halfbake.../Connecting_20Coins [phoenix, Oct 05 2004]
70p bus fare and 30p coin
http://www.halfbake...om/idea/30p_20piece [bungston, Oct 05 2004]
Canadian $2 coin
http://www.mint.ca/...htm?cookie%5Ftest=1 Concentric rings. "The outer ring of the two dollar coin is nickel and the inner core is aluminum bronze" [waugsqueke]
Electromagnetic "footprint"
http://www.copper.o...Ct89/newcoin89.html Straying a little off topic - regarding design of the new dollar coin and electromagnetic signature. Not positive how this is used by coinop machines. [waugsqueke, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 06 2004]
Electromagnetic "footprint"
http://www.copper.o...Ct89/newcoin89.html Straying a little off topic - regarding design of the new dollar coin and electromagnetic signature. Not positive how this is used by coinop machines. [bungston, Oct 05 2004]
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Annotation:
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// only very round things could be depicted on coins. // |
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That's even cooler! Then you'd need a [matching!] set of coins to complete the picture. Maybe a set of 1996 coins would form a picture of an eagle, and a set of 1997 coins would form a picture of a bull, etc. |
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If we're doing away with messy rolls, then surely the answer is croissants? They'd stack better, too. |
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Also, you seem undecided whether you're talking about cents or pence... |
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I do like the fact that radius could track
value without the typical squarefold mass proportionality.
But variation in ambient temperature might make
it hard to nest coins precisely (could one use a series of
metals like those in the old two-tone ringed Italian and
French coins, which have complementary density changes
with temperature?). And maybe wide-pitch screwmounts
would allow more secure coupling. |
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Screwmounts - yes! That is exactly what is needed. |
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I thought that US coin sorters also work on electrical impedence. I seem to remember that is was tricky getting a gold color alloy for the new Saccy dollar to match the impedence of the old susan anthony dollars they replaced. The reason this was important was for coin machine operators. |
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re: [waugs] Canadian $2 coin link--the centre does not pop out as in [bung's] idea, however, if you peel it open there is chocolate inside. |
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Apologies for any confusion - I did not mean to suggest that the CDN $2 center pops out. I posted it as an example of what a two-tier concentric coin looks like. |
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//I thought that US coin sorters also work on electrical impedence.// |
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It's certainly possible for them to do so, but I think most are just mechanical. Probably depends a lot on the application. |
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BTW, I wonder whether impedance-based coin sorters have special program to deal with "real" quarters? |
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You run into a lot of fake quarters, [supercat]? |
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Used to be a big problem. Now it's mostly fake $50 bills. |
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[fogfreak], I'd worry that magnetized coin stacks might
screw with data on personal cards in folks' pockets. |
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The centre of a Canadian two dollar coin does pop out.
If you hit it hard enough. |
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