Will A 3D Printed Quarter Work In A Gumball Machine? #shorts

75
Will A 3D Printed Quarter Work In A Gumball Machine? #shorts

I try a hack on my own gumball equipment to see if a 3d published quarter will turn. This gumball equipment I got on Ebay as well as is the most difficult to hack – will it transform?

These are for experiment & research study on my very own machines, do not try.

#shorts #gumballmachine #vendingmachine

75 thoughts on “Will A 3D Printed Quarter Work In A Gumball Machine? #shorts

  1. “No problem first try”
    *The Federal Government disliked that*

    Edit: ayo 31k likes is crazy
    Edit to the Edit: too bad i didnt do this on my Youtube channel instead of my personal account T^T 30k for a throwaway comment that made me chuckle is insane thanks

    1. @Allstar_zombie7 You can’t (normally) have 0.01 of a cent, the video says 1 cent, and 25 – 0.01 doesn’t equal 24.
      Although your _answer_ is correct, it is 24 cents.

    2. ​@Joseph Zamora if it was meant to pass as real currency it would have the denomination on it saying it’s value. It has to be more than just a similar shape

    1. why hasn’t anyone pointed out that the gumball is already bought and paid for by the owner of the gumball machine… unless they are getting gumballs up front and selling them for the gumball manufacturers 😂

    2. I think i saw a documentary at like 3 am saying the gumball market is doing very badly in the 2000s compared with 1900s

    1. @Dana Nwell vending machines can measure the exact size, if it is and what type a metal a coin is, and weight. A gumball machine on the other hand

  2. Guy: spends money to 3d print
    Teens: use duct tape quarter trick to get unlimited gumballs with 1 quarter

    1. honestly if I was a gumball machine designer the first thing I’d do would be making sure it can’t complete a turn with the coin still in the slot. Can’t expect gravity to do all the work

    2. ​@A Tesla BatteryI’m sure they can’t anymore. Everything now will take the coin so you can’t pull on it

  3. Fun fact: in Panama they use U.S. currency, but also have their own currency called balboas. A .25 cent piece Balboa is the exact same size and weight as an American quarter and will work in American vending machines.

  4. Doesn’t even have to be a quarter. It can be the same size as a quarter and it’ll work. As a kid, I use to get 4 quarters from my mom, get one of those temporary tattoos that comes in the white cardboard sleeve, use the sleeve to trace out several “quarters” and use the cardboard quarters for other machines. Did it for YEARS at a CiCis Pizza arcade💀💀

    1. Yeah lol wtf, you seem to look back on those memories fondly but they’re just happy they relocated to a patented community

    2. Same. Did this at those Gacha machines that gives out toys. I get some hard paper and just stack them until they match the size of a quarter. Did this every week so they don’t get suspicious and I always get those fun toys

  5. My brother 3D printed a keychain attachment that was coin-shaped for my mom, so she could use that instead of scrounging around the car every time we needed a coin for a shopping cart.

    Like, you know those shopping carts that you need to insert a coin in order to unattach it from the one in front of it? Yeah, haven’t had to stress about forgetting a coin for one of those in a long while.

    1. That’s so cool! Over here in the UK many retailers sold these, they were a simple piece of metal in the shape of a pound coin and different places would sell them with different engravings/designs. They were called trolley coins. I feel like a lot of them fell out of use when our pound coin changed shape, but you can probably still get updated ones from online.

  6. Bro could really multiply his money by 25 times by getting 1 cent gumball from a bunch of machines, and then putting them in his own machine for 25 cents 💀

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *