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| The Schoolcraft Flipper is an extremely deceptive coin gaff that allows one coin to instantly open into what appears to be two coins, or conversely allows two coins to quickly close into one solid coin. | |||||
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The Schoolcraft
Flipper coin differs from traditional Flipper coins in three ways.
1.
The coin opens via
gravity. This means you do not have to shake the coin to make it
open. Simply pick it up by its edges and the coin will fall
open. Yet, the coin will spring closed and remain closed when
you let it go.
2.
When open, the
coin can lay flat on your hands or on a table surface. Combined
with feature #1 above, you can simply pick up the coin and place it
back down in an open position with no strange hand motions.
3.
There is no
visible rubber band in the edge of the open gaff like traditional
Flipper coins. The rubber band is internal. This enables
the open gaff to withstand reasonable scrutiny from the side.
This feature also provides the unique characteristics listed in #1 and
#2 without using a rubber band that has been overextended to weaken
its elasticity. (A brand new rubber band is used in all
Schoolcraft Flipper coins).
The Schoolcraft
Flipper coin has been sold to many inventive magicians in the last two
years. Most recently in 2005, it was featured on Dan Watkins’
Coin Man Walking DVD, where all the above attributes (minus the steel
core feature) were demonstrated in vivid detail during an interview
segment. Dan uses the Schoolcraft Flipper as part of his
brilliant routine, “4 Coins, Your Hands”. Master coin man
Dean Dill has an unbelievable “Coins thru Table” routine coming
soon utilizing this revolutionary gimmick.
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| Eagle Quarter |
State Quarter (Double Headed) |
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| Franklin | 1964 Kennedy Halves | ||||
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| Walking Liberty | Barber Halves | ||||
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| 1921 Morgan Dollar | Peace Dollar | ||||
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