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RedDeerGuy1's avatar

What is the counting error percentage rate with automatic cash counters?

Asked by RedDeerGuy1 (24473points) November 12th, 2023

For any bills?
For any country?

Like from notes sticking together ect.

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7 Answers

Zaku's avatar

Every time someone types “ect” when they mean “etc” (which stands for “et cetera” [“and again”, in Latin]), the god of typos flinches and bumps the god of ATMs, who makes an ATM make a mistake.

So there is no one rate. People cause it by typing ect.

(Prove me wrong.)

RedDeerGuy1's avatar

@Zaku Do you think that I can win a class action lawsuit toward my English, and language arts teachers? I believe that most of them are dead or retired.

LadyMarissa's avatar

According to my bank, the error percentage is ZERO for cash counters!!! I don’t believe that for a second, but do think it is low enough that an occasional error can’t be easily corrected. Human error is much higher!!! When cash counters are used,the tellers have a habit of recounting it in front of me, & I ALWAYS count it myself before leaving the area.

LifeQuestioner's avatar

I used to work at a local grocery store and every night we would use one of those counters to verify amounts. And I would say that they never made a mistake because our money always came out to where it should. So I’m guessing the percentage is pretty low.

Zaku's avatar

@RedDeerGuy1 No, I don’t. Maybe your best chance would be if Donald Trump somehow becomes dictator of some banana republic, you can appeal your case to him.

RedDeerGuy1's avatar

@Zaku oh ok. Would writing about overcoming my past psychological damages and distress from K-12 and post-secondary education, to the working world, be something that anyone would anyone like to read? Or should I stick to sharing with Fluther, at this time?

elbanditoroso's avatar

My guess is that the condition of the currency makes a difference. A faded, almost tissue-like dollar bill is probably less likely to be counted / handled without incident than a crisp, unfolded bill.

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