

So here's what I did....first, I ran just 15 pennies that I had already hand-sorted, along with 5 zincs; everything went good, except one 1964 copper penny got rejected for some reason. After playing with the potentiometer a bit, I re-ran it and the machine promptly accepted the questionable 1964 penny. I actually like to sort for any perfect shiny looking ones (2009/2010, 60s BU)), so I did spend some time pulling out the shiny ones from the $15 worth of CWRs. Ran the batch through and got just over 20%, along with 3 common Wheats and two 98% CDN pennies. The CDN pennies actually got accepted with the copper 1981 coin in the comparitor. Not sure why, but that's OK. Then I re-ran the coppers and only 1 or 2 (out of 750) were rejected the second time. Not bad. Then I ran the zinc through just for the heck of it and it only found 1. I also ran a small bag's worth of hand-sorted copper and it found three in there too; my eyes must have been off that day.
It was so much fun, that I did $25 more in CWRs...now we're talking volume! Man, that Ryedale just hums along nicely, doesn't it? It did 2500 pennies ($25) in 10 minutes (250/minute). Oh yeah! (23% & 2 98% CDN, but no Wheats). I will sort the completed coppers for S-Mint Memorials and additional BUs at another time. Truthfully, I still like handsorting now and then.
I can see now why some of the big boys out there have multiple machines.

Thanks for listening! By the way, I'm open to your ideas for improving my speed/efficiency. For the CWR rolls, I knife the top of them so that they can be quickly poured out of the wrapper. Not sure if this will work for the plastic shrink-wrapped rolls, though. Maybe I'll try them tomorrow.