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Replies: 25 / Views: 3,586 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2273 Posts |
There has been an '84 copper, and a later date as well (1987 I believe) that have been found.
Planchets get hung up in the presses and elsewhere and get back into the production stream.
Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1053 Posts |
Quote: Spend them, cash them in, coin star them if a have a ton...or if I am in a mean mood...put them in hydrochloric acid and watch it fizz to nothingness.lol 
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Rest in Peace
United States
4078 Posts |
Quote: There has been an '84 copper, and a later date as well (1987 I believe) that have been found. Cladking, do have a reference for these finds?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2273 Posts |
My memory letting me down right now. I believe lots of the '84's have been found and a single later date. The later date was actually found in change by one of the more famous error experts. There are probably dozens of the '83 known and many more in circulation.
Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
Edited by cladking 11/02/2013 8:27 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
593 Posts |
Whats the best way to distinguish between the copper and zinc cents? I have 82 and 83`s that look very similar. I am into the older cents and have never messed with the LMC`s, but with errors etc., I may have to start checking them closer.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Makes me wonder how many 1983 Doubled Die Reverses have been distroyed. Also, the 1984 Double Ear. And too, the 95 Doubled Die and all the Wide AM's.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2273 Posts |
The destruction of moderns is remarkably high. Virtually all varieties that don't appear in mint sets are scarce or rare because people aren't looking. The exceptions are those that get found soon after issue and then reported in the hobby press. These get scooped up even before most get into circulation. But very few people checked coins at all between 1965 and 1998 so the scarce coins circulated freely. Even now they aren't being checked very well and some great finds get made.
In the future we'll see most dime and quarter varieties are scarce above F condition and much more available in low grade. More than half of the earliest clad has been lost forever and if people don't start looking even fewer of the varieties will be available.
It's worse with pennies. These don't circulate so they don't wear but they corrode in change jars and get banged up on sidewalks. The attrition is enormous because they aren't often retrieved if they are dropped. They end up in landfills and burnt up in munincipal incinerators. Attrition on '80's copper is enormous and zincs are even higher since they never had value. Now copper is being separated out for its metallic value and 98% of the copper pennies will never be checked to see if there are any dates after 1982. They'll just be melted. While it's illegal to melt these now, it's a safe bet many already are because copper is easy to melt and many people don't need large amounts.
I'd guess fewer than 10% of 1982 zinc pennies are still in collectible condition. Most of these are nice VF to AU+. Uncs are a tiny fraction of this and Gems a tiny fraction of Uncs. Any '83 copper in circulation has only about a 25% chance of still existing but the attrition will soar as soon as the melting ban is lifted. Like the other modern varieties, most will probably end up never being found.
Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2273 Posts |
Quote: Whats the best way to distinguish between the copper and zinc cents? I have 82 and 83`s that look very similar. I am into the older cents and have never messed with the LMC`s, but with errors etc., I may have to start checking them closer. It depends on how many you want to check. The difference in weight is large so they are pretty easy with just a ruler with a copper penny at about 11 1/2 inches and a fulcrum in the middle. If you put a penny on the end and it doesn't move then it's zinc. If you want to check thousands you're better off with a mechanical separator. "All" copper pennies look like copper pennies. Lots of zinc pennies look like copper pennies too but as they age fewer look like copper. If you just check the ones that look like copper it will save some work. Keep in mind though that at current prices you won't get much "pay" for your time. You'll go through a lot of coins before you find a copper made after 1982.
Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
19972 Posts |
Cladking = 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
593 Posts |
I have noticed from walking around stores or at a park etc, how many pennies I have found that the younger generation just toss or never pickup when they drop them. Even a few nickles also.
I guess that being older when you still could buy penny candy and .05 candy bars could be some of the reason why I would pick them up. Now days there isn't much to get for that price.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2368 Posts |
Chuck 'em when I go to my dump bank with the coin machine.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1812 Posts |
here is what I did with approx. 150 beat to heck zincolns... prior to posting on CCF about six months back, I sent the photos to the U.S.Mint facebook page to inquire it this was legal or not, since I made these as art and not to profit from... I have not received any reply and assume it's legal. The Silver Dollar is shown for size comparison. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
655 Posts |
Quote: what do you do with zincolns? I drill holes in them and use them as washers. 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Put in a box, can, jar, etc and take to a bank. Waste of time rolling them. And the bank usually will give you the box, can, jar, etc. back.
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
Could they be used as shrapnel in artillery shells? They would save the taxpayer rather than using genuine shrapnel!  As most already know, it costs more PER TRANSACTION to use a 1 cent coin, than the coin is actually worth.
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Replies: 25 / Views: 3,586 |
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