Counting notes by hand at the end of a trading day is one of the most persistently inefficient tasks in any cash-handling business. It is slow — a trained...
Licensed clubs and gaming venues in Australia operate with a cash handling complexity that most other businesses simply do not face. Gaming machine collections happen continuously throughout the day....
The cash recycler market in Australia has matured significantly in recent years. Where once professional cash recycling equipment was the exclusive territory of major banks and casino operators, machines...
The term notes recycler machine is used across Australian banking, gaming, retail, and hospitality sectors to describe equipment that processes banknotes through the complete cash handling cycle — accepting...
If you have been researching cash handling equipment for your business, you may have come across two terms used almost interchangeably — money recycler and money counter. They sound...
If your business processes significant daily cash — a licensed club, a gaming venue, a large retail operation, or a busy hospitality business — you may have heard the...
The term “industrial money counter” gets used loosely in Australia — sometimes to mean any machine that’s better than a basic desktop counter, sometimes to mean the kind of...
At the end of a long trading day, most business owners face the same two tasks back-to-back: count the cash, then lock it away safely until it can be...
Accepting a counterfeit note at your till means losing the full face value — there is no bank compensation, no recovery mechanism, and no second chance once the customer...
A counterfeit note accepted at the till costs your business the full face value — you hand over real goods or services and receive paper in return. The bank...
