The hole in the CD is where the machine you put it in "grips" the CD so the disk can be spun and thus read and used.
On the face of the cd player, look for a small hole. With the power off, insert a paperclip in the hole, turning the gears to push the cd out of the player.
most CD drives have a tiny hole near where the CD goes in, just stick something in the hole, like a paperclip or something. Push it into the hole and it will force the CD out. It might not have the hole, I think only computer style CD drives have it.
CD's have a diameter of 5.5 centimeters;)
No it's the hole that kills collectible value. If the coin is silver it has scrap value
It gets bigger
To remove a coin in a CD player, use a popsicle stick. Place double sided adhesive half of the popsicle's length. The coin will stick to it.
The hole was used to tie a string in order to recover the coin once the coin was used in a vending machine .
tecnolgy
15mm (1.5cm).
A hole. Not everything needs an official name.
Look at your CD player and search for a tiny hole near the CD player. This is designed to allow you to open the CD player when it is stuck. Insert a small pin or paper clip into the hole and the CD player should open up.