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BEITZ BS-920 money counting machine | Value counter | Bill validator

BEITZ BS-920 money counting machine | Value counter | Bill validator

Regular price €679,98 EUR
Regular price €749,98 EUR Sale price €679,98 EUR
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

BEITZ BS-920 money counting machine

By purchasing this item, you are opting for a high-quality money counting machine designed for commercial use. The banknote counter also meets the reliability of counterfeit detection required by the European Central Bank (ECB). By purchasing this device, you are taking a reliable preventive measure for your own protection against accepting counterfeit money. Depending on the volume of banknotes, many hours of work can be saved when counting the turnover. The value counter is able to accept the unsorted bundles of money in different orientations and count them reliably. With the Bill Counter BS-920, you can count and check the currencies EURO (old and new), US dollars and British pounds with the full range of functions without any further updates.

Reliable counterfeit money detection

  • Checking banknotes with UV, MG, MT, IR testing methods (individually adjustable sensitivity)
  • Color matching to apparent value
  • Matching the apparent thickness and apparent size to the apparent value
  • Double note detection (adjustable sensitivity)
  • Verification of the banknote serial number (adjustable sensitivity)
  • Recognition of half notes and chain notes


UV: UV features are checked during counting by the machine's UV and photo sensors

MG: Banknote color is tested for the presence of magnetic pigments in color

MT: Magnetic code on the silver strip of the banknote is checked

IR: Testing a specific security feature using infrared radiation

Functional scope

This money counting machine includes a wide range of functions so that you are prepared for every situation.

Info:

The following functions can be combined with each other

  • Value Counting (MDC)
  • Addition function (ADD)
  • Banknote sorting (SDC)
  • Batch formation of 1 to 200 notes (BATCH)
  • Banknote sorting by front and back orientation (FACE)
  • Banknote sorting according to top and bottom orientation (ORI)

Low stock: 10 left

Instructions on the Electrical and Electronic Equipment Act (ElektroG)

The following information is intended for private households that use electrical and/or electronic devices. Please note these important instructions in the interests of environmentally friendly disposal of old devices and your own safety.

1. Information on the disposal of electrical and electronic equipment and the meaning of the symbol in Annex 3 to the ElektroG:

Owners of old devices must dispose of them separately from unsorted municipal waste. Old electrical and electronic devices must therefore not be disposed of as unsorted municipal waste and in particular do not belong in household waste. Instead, these old devices must be collected separately and disposed of via the local collection and return systems.

Owners of old devices must also separate old batteries and accumulators that are not enclosed in the old device before handing them in to a collection point.

The latter does not apply if the old equipment is separated from other old equipment in accordance with Section 14 Paragraph 5 Sentences 2 and 3 of the ElektroG within the scope of the option granted by the public waste disposal authorities for the purpose of preparing it for reuse in order to prepare it for reuse.

Using the symbol in Annex 3 to the ElektroG, owners can identify old devices that must be collected separately from unsorted municipal waste. The symbol for the separate collection of electrical and electronic devices represents a crossed-out wheeled waste bin and is designed as follows:

2. Information on the options for returning old devices:

Owners of old devices can hand them in using the return or collection options set up and available by public waste disposal authorities to ensure that the old devices are disposed of properly. If necessary, electrical and electronic devices can also be handed in there for the purpose of reusing the devices. You can obtain more information about this from the relevant collection or return point.

The following link provides an online directory of collection and return points: https://www.ear-system.de/ear-verzeichnis/sammel-und-ruecknahmestellen

3. Note on data protection

Old devices that are to be disposed of sometimes contain sensitive personal data (e.g. on a PC or a smartphone) that must not fall into the hands of third parties.

We expressly point out that end users of old devices are responsible for ensuring that personal data on the old devices to be disposed of are deleted.

The following notice is intended for those who use batteries or products with built-in batteries and no longer resell them in the form in which they were delivered to them (end users):

1. Free return of used batteries

Batteries must not be disposed of in household waste. You are legally obliged to return old batteries so that proper disposal can be ensured. You can hand in old batteries at a municipal collection point or at a local retailer. As a distributor of batteries, we are also obliged to take back old batteries, although our obligation to take back is limited to old batteries of the type that we have or have had in our range as new batteries. You can therefore either send old batteries of the aforementioned type back to us with sufficient postage or hand them in free of charge directly to our shipping warehouse at the address stated in the imprint.

2. Meaning of the battery symbols

Batteries are marked with the symbol of a crossed-out garbage can (see below). This symbol indicates that batteries must not be disposed of in household waste. For batteries that contain more than 0.0005 percent mercury by weight, more than 0.002 percent cadmium by weight or more than 0.004 percent lead by weight, the chemical name of the pollutant used is located under the garbage can symbol - "Cd" stands for cadmium, "Pb" stands for lead and "Hg" for mercury.

3. Vehicle batteries

When selling vehicle batteries (these are batteries intended for the starter, lighting or ignition of vehicles), the following special features apply: According to Section 10 of the Battery Act, the seller is obliged to charge end users a deposit of EUR 7.50 including VAT for each vehicle battery if the end user does not return an old vehicle battery to the seller at the time of purchasing the new vehicle battery. The customer receives a deposit voucher when purchasing a vehicle battery. The customer can return the old vehicle battery to the seller to receive a refund of the deposit. Due to the Dangerous Goods Ordinance, sending the old vehicle battery to the seller is not permitted. Alternatively, the customer can return the old vehicle battery to a collection point set up by the public waste disposal authority. If the old vehicle battery is not returned to the seller who collects the deposit, the person authorized to collect the old vehicle battery according to Section 11 Paragraph 3 of the Battery Act who takes back the old vehicle battery is obliged to confirm the return without refunding the deposit to the end user in writing or electronically upon request. In this case, the customer will receive a refund of the deposit from the seller, provided that he presents the seller with written or electronic proof of return in accordance with Section 10 Paragraph 1 Clause 4 of the Battery Act, which is not older than two weeks at the time of submission.

Hersteller & EU Verantwortliche Person

Hersteller

Losmann GmbH
Herzbergstr. 128-139 Halle 6
10365 Berlin
Deutschland

Tel. +49 30 98601266
Email. losmanngmbh@outlook.de

EU Verantwortliche Person

Stefan Bachmann
Frankfurter Allee 154
10365 Berlin
Deutschland

Tel. +49 177 8092770
Email. Bachmann.handel@gmail.com

Produktsicherheit & Konformitätserklärung

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HOW DO BEITZ MONEY COUNTING MACHINES WORK?

HOW DOES A MONEY COUNTER MACHINE COUNT BILLS?

When you place a stack of banknotes into the banknote counter's feeder, the bottom banknote activates a feed roller. As the roller rotates, it passes the bottom banknote to a second roller, which rotates at a higher speed. Low-friction devices on either side of the second roller ensure that only one banknote is picked up at a time. The notes are then separated by fan rollers before being passed past an optical sensor and counted (both the number and value, depending on the machine). The counted notes then land neatly in the output chute at the front of the machine.

WHAT FUNCTIONS DO MODERN MONEY COUNTERS HAVE TODAY?

The simplest counting machines can only tell you how many banknotes or vouchers you have inserted - but much faster than counting by hand (and without counting errors). More powerful banknote counters, on the other hand, automate more than just counting money for you. For example, all value counters in the BEITZ product range have an addition function as standard, which you can use to add up the number of notes in several stacks of money. The bundle function allows you to speed up the preparation of cash drawers and bank deposits by stopping the device after a certain number of banknotes have been counted. The top class consists of highly developed money counting machines, such as the BS-950, which, in addition to advanced counterfeit detection, can even count the value of mixed stacks of money.

HOW DO MONEY COUNTING MACHINES DETECT COUNTERFEIT BANKNOTES?

As the banknote passes through the machine, a series of integrated sensors check one or more of the security features of modern currencies. Simpler machines only check for the presence of UV markings; more sophisticated machines also check for magnetic properties and sizes. Top-of-the-range banknote counters, such as those in the BEITZ 900 range, are specifically programmed to detect the UV, infrared, magnetic, hologram and unique size features of every denomination of every supported currency. (You can read more about how counterfeit detection works in detail on our counterfeit detection page.)

DO THE BANKNOTES HAVE TO BE SORTED BEFORE COUNTING?

This depends on your counting machine and the features you have turned on. Any money counting machine can count bills of one denomination as they pass through its optical sensor. But to count mixed bills — for example, a stack of fives, tens and twenties — the machine must also be able to recognize the different denominations during the counting process. (Within one currency.) Advanced counting machines (BS-950 BS-920 BS-5300) can count every denomination in a stack in just one counting pass, saving a huge amount of time compared to previous manual sorting.