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Replies: 27 / Views: 3,730 |
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New Member
 United States
10 Posts |
Thanks jbuck! So It appears I need to do some searching for 2x2 flips, pages and binders. Thanks for all your help!
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
19176 Posts |
Some local coin shops have used Dansco albums for sale--many albums are in very good to excellent condition (in my experience anyway). The variety of used Danscos will vary. In most cases, prices (at the shop) are reasonable. Next time you're in a large metro area, check out a shop or two.
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New Member
 United States
10 Posts |
Thanks ijn1944! I might try and do that, because all I seem to be able to find with flips is bad reviews, that state nothing lines up and/or has dust particles all over them when they arrive which is bad for the coins. The issue is in my area there are not stores that sell flips in-person, so I am stuck buying online. So, I do not know condition of items until they arrive I can only go by reviews. Thanks to all that have helped. Anything else, links to reputable flips or other items it still appreciated.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7276 Posts |
Edited by hfjacinto 11/30/2020 2:45 pm
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New Member
 United States
10 Posts |
Awesome hfjacinto! That is pretty impressive, do you buy flips online? If so, can you please share a link to those as well?
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Valued Member
United States
284 Posts |
RATS! I do have advice. Call me "uninformed." I faced a similar (if you'll allow) problem. I did not inherit; I bought -- a large coin collection half a century past. I rejoined it for the first time three years past. Quite a few albums, I must tell. In those three years, among other interactions with the coins, I have managed to strip at least a dozen albums naked, exiling the empties to a cold corner, while modifying one -- so far. Why did I strip so many albums? I did so because I regard the albums themselves to be obsolete. They mark a bygone (for us) age of accrual.We have accrued. That's our problem! They once served to enhance an adventuring collector's relationship with his coins. They served as a display of that adventuring in relationship with fellow collectors. What did I do with the coins I pulled? I put each in a 2x2 enroute to my modern-day album. I could easily store these in a box, but a BCW three ring binder sheet (cost: $0.19 on Amazon) holds 20, My BCW sheet goes into a three ring binder ($2.00 at Walmart. I store six to eight sheets to a binder. I will store eight penny sheets, but never eight Ike dollar sheets. Two dollar binders have weight control issues.) My coins never go completely out of my sight (that in sight aspect is the lure of albums, so I preserve it ). If new information about a coin variety reaches me, extracting, reexamining reinserting 2x2's is safe and simple. I pay two and one-half cents to replace any I destroy. Many of my scrapped albums reveal minor unrepairable damage. Here's my salvation: I give each 2x2 a penned serial no. That serial no. lives in a computer spreadsheet column. (Digital spreadsheets cost next to nothing). In the column next to the serial number reads what the album will offer beneath the coin: 1945D or 1953S etc. - that's all the album offers except, perhaps, a back cover mintage number printout. I don't bother, but loading that column or any other would be a cinch. My next columns record grade, condition, maybe last PCGS auction price and anything else relevant. I keep backups on inexpensive thumb drives. Why did I keep one album (so far) intact with modification? This was because my assessment of bygone album value is not the "absolute rule of law" in coin country. As I went through my complete Walking Liberty half album researching data for spreadsheet columns, I came across data (unavailable half a century past) that warned a few coins need lives of their own outside the albums -- outside Dansco AND outside my substitute for the old albums. I bought replacements which lacked these errors and varieties off ebay and reassembled the Dansco. When need comes to wrap my mind around what coins I have, I view my spreadsheets wherein columns return much more of my stored hard won unlost info than any pretty album ever could. meanwhile back at the 2x2, a few of them also have a note or two of info hen-scratched onto them that would defile a pretty Dansco. You did say, "., even if it something I mentioned and you can make me look at things from another "side" of things. Anything is greatly appreciated." Did you not? Kevin
Edited by Kcm 11/30/2020 5:15 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7276 Posts |
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New Member
 United States
10 Posts |
Thanks to both Kcm & hfjacinto! You are definitely right Kevin. I love to hear what others have done. You never stop learning. And thank you for the links hfjacinto. I will take a look and see what I can come up with.
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Quote: ...dust particles all over them when they arrive which is bad for the coins. This is a common problem and the best thing is to keep a can of compressed air handy. The same stuff we use with electronics... https://www.amazon.com/Dust-Off-Com.../B01MQFCYW0/
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1373 Posts |
Quote: ...That serial no. lives in a computer spreadsheet... Which works until the computer 'crashes' and all that data is lost. I have FOUR dead computers sitting in my garage and HUNDREDS of 'floppies' full of (mainly) all the family photos taken over the past 30 years or so. I'm hoping to someday find a way to grab all those pics and various historic data (like expense sheets of all my coin purchases since 1995) to put into CD's. Even then, I've heard CD's and DVD's are on their way out too, so who knows what the next 'gimmick' might be. I've learned to now put copies of almost everything to old fashioned paper.
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
For binders I just use recycled trade sample catalog binders with four rings. Four rings are needed to support the weight of a page that is fully loaded with coins. They cost me nothing, but are perfectly suitable for the purpose. If you are lucky, similar can be found in office supplies stores, if you have to buy them.
Not keen on 'push in' coin albums, or those with clear slide bars, where abrasive dust can scratch the coins. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All of the information that relates to each individual coin is written on the cardboard Mylar flip that holds the coin. No need for info to be stored on a computer.
If I need to move a coin from one section of the collection to another section, all of the information relating to the coin travels with it. One of a number of reasons why none of my coins are slabbed. The fact that you can't write extensive info on a slab that relates to the coin is another. To find a coin, all that is needed is to arrange your collection in a way that makes sense to you.
Edited by sel_69l 11/30/2020 8:37 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7276 Posts |
Quote: Which works until the computer 'crashes' and all that data is lost. I have FOUR dead computers sitting in my garage and HUNDREDS of 'floppies' full of (mainly) all the family photos taken over the past 30 years or so. I'm hoping to someday find a way to grab all those pics and various historic data (like expense sheets of all my coin purchases since 1995) to put into CD's. Even then, I've heard CD's and DVD's are on their way out too, so who knows what the next 'gimmick' might be. I've learned to now put copies of almost everything to old fashioned paper. Off topic, get an external Hard Drive. I copy everything on my laptop to the harddrive once a week so the most I lose is a week. If its important I copy it over that day. I have a TB drive that cost about $100. I lost a few photos when my last laptop crashed, but I had the photos in the camera so I just downloaded it again.
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Valued Member
United States
284 Posts |
If you read my reply, @atticguy you may notice my closing comment: I integrate a backup thumb drive.
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Valued Member
United States
124 Posts |
@atticguy External (USB) floppy drives can be found pretty cheaply, and they still work on modern PC's. I've used one on a Windows 10 box.
@simplysavage922 I personally don't use Danscos, as they expose coins directly to the air more than a flip would--and also are hard to get coins into and out of without touching the surfaces. Mylar flips are cheap and offer good protection (that's what I use personally), but it seems like you're trying to get away from those--so I'd say cardboard 2x2s in a binder are the next best bet...
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Moderator
 United States
188770 Posts |
Quote: Which works until the computer 'crashes' and all that data is lost. Backups! Backups! Backups! People, please, backup your data in multiple places! I use a rotation of three external drives, kept in separate locations. I have data that is over thirty years old now. Many of the original systems are long gone, but the data survives. 
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Replies: 27 / Views: 3,730 |
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