Description
Running a business that handles cash every day means end-of-day reconciliation is a fixed cost of doing business. How long it takes, and how accurately it’s done, depends entirely on the machine you use. The H110 Cash Counting Machine is built for the Australian business that wants bank-grade detection accuracy — without paying bank-level prices.
At 720 notes per minute with Dual CIS colour image detection running simultaneously, it processes a full till’s worth of notes in under 45 seconds. Counterfeit notes are detected and separated automatically. Serial numbers are logged for every note processed. The result is a clean, authenticated count with a full audit trail — and staff back to their regular duties in minutes.
Who Is the H110 For?
The H110 is the right machine for any Australian business that counts cash daily and wants the detection technology used in banks and financial institutions — in a compact, counter-friendly format.
- Retail stores: Single to three-till operations needing fast, accurate end-of-day reconciliation
- Cafés and restaurants: Mixed denomination daily takings counted and authenticated in under a minute
- Hospitality venues: Reliable detection of $50 and $100 notes across busy Friday and Saturday nights
- Service counters and reception: Clean denomination breakdown for float preparation and daily banking
- Small to medium businesses moving up from a basic machine: The clear upgrade path when UV-only detection is no longer adequate
Key Features Explained
Dual CIS Detection — The Difference That Matters
Most entry-level money counters use UV detection only. The H110 uses Dual CIS — a dual-sided colour image sensor that captures and analyses both faces of every note simultaneously. This is the same core detection technology used in bank teller equipment and Reserve Bank processing machinery. It identifies denominations, authenticates notes against a reference database, and flags counterfeits with significantly greater reliability than UV-only systems.

Combined with UV, magnetic (MG), and infrared (IR) detection running in parallel, the H110 provides four-method counterfeit protection on every note — catching fakes that single or dual-method machines miss.
Comprehensive Fitness Detection
Beyond counterfeit detection, the H110 identifies twelve categories of note damage and irregularity: soil, tape, graffiti, stain, hole, tear, de-ink, watermark, missing corner, missing edge, dog-ear, and double notes. Each flagged note is routed automatically to the reject pocket — keeping your counted stack clean and your banking bundles free of unacceptable notes.
Serial Number Logging
The H110 reads and logs the unique serial number of every note processed. These records are queryable and exportable via USB or LAN. For businesses that accept high-value notes regularly, or for any operation where cash accountability is important, serial number logs provide an audit trail that manual counting simply cannot replicate.
LAN Connectivity for Reporting
The H110’s LAN port allows count data to feed directly to networked accounting or reporting systems — no manual data entry required. For businesses that want daily cash totals available to their accountant or back-office without someone typing them in, this is a practical time-saving feature that entry-level machines don’t offer.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | H110 Details |
| Counting Speed | 720 notes/min (typical) |
| Detection Method | Dual CIS (Colour Image Sensing) — dual-sided |
| Additional Detection | UV + Magnetic (MG) + Infrared (IR) |
| Fitness Detection | 12 types: soil, tape, graffiti, stain, hole, tear, de-ink, watermark, missing corner, missing edge, dog-ear, double notes |
| Hopper Capacity | 500 notes |
| Stacker Capacity | 200 notes |
| Reject Pocket | 100 notes |
| Mixed Value Counting | Auto currency recognition — AUD, USD, EUR and more |
| Serial Number | Capture, data analysis, logs, statistical reports |
| Connectivity | 2× USB Host / 1× USB Device / 1× Serial Port / 1× LAN Port |
| Optional | External printer, external user display |
| Compliance | CE, CB, FCC certified |
| Weight | Approximately 16.5 kg |
| Best For | Small–medium business, 1–3 tills, daily cash count |
Why Buy From Cashcom?
Cashcom has supplied professional cash handling equipment to Australian businesses, banks, clubs, and CIT operators since 2015. Every machine we supply is configured for Australian currency — the H110 is calibrated specifically for AUD polymer notes, not just a generic unit imported without local configuration.
When you purchase from Cashcom, you have a reachable Australian support team available Monday to Friday, 9am–6pm. We can advise on setup, answer technical questions, and assist if issues arise — something you don’t get from offshore marketplace purchases.
Frequently Asked Questions
| Does the H110 work with Australian polymer banknotes?
Yes. The H110 is configured for Australian currency. It is calibrated for AUD polymer note denominations ($5, $10, $20, $50, $100) and the specific security features of Australian notes, including UV fluorescence, magnetic ink patterns, and infrared absorption profiles. |
| How does Dual CIS detection compare to UV-only detection?
UV detection checks for ultraviolet fluorescent markings on notes. Dual CIS imaging captures full-colour images of both note faces and compares them against a genuine note database — providing significantly more comprehensive authentication. UV-only machines can be defeated by high-quality counterfeits; Dual CIS combined with MG and IR is much more difficult to fool. |
| Can the H110 sort notes by denomination?
The H110 counts notes and provides a denomination breakdown on screen — but routes all notes to a single output stack rather than physically separating them by denomination. For physical denomination sorting into separate output pockets, see the H210 Money Counter and Sorter Machine. |
| What happens when a counterfeit note is detected?
The H110 routes any note that fails authentication to the dedicated reject pocket — physically separating it from the counted stack. The serial number of the rejected note is logged, and the rejection is flagged on the display. |
