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Blue N.f Strings & Son, Inc $2.00 Nickel Rolls?

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OcalaFlorida's Avatar
United States
2824 Posts
 Posted 04/23/2014  11:12 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add OcalaFlorida to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
I usually get customer rolled nickels this time I got bank rolled ones. I know when I get my lincoln cents this was they are all bu one date depending on the color of the wrapper.

Does that also apply to nickels or could they be anything or mixed. As I have over 10 different dates on end coins

I am pretty sure these blue rolls will be mixed dates. I see on Amazon these sell B007BD2ZM0 they sell those exact wrappers for machines. I know aba need all nickel to be blue but I mean the light stripe vs the darker two thin stripe then thick strip vs the only thin stripe, etc.


the I have question is are there any other wrapper color or coding on nickel bank rolls that can be used to tell difference between original bank roll by bank from bank, versus re-wrap my bank does it rewraps in clear shrink wrap btw. Besides the newer mint roll wrappers of coarse.

N.F Strings & Son has two types the paper bag looking type wrapper, and the other is very white wrapper.

I got mixed very whites ones today which throws off my thoery.

Only reason is most are bu rolls so if they all same date I wont crack them open.
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Collector-Corner's Avatar
872 Posts
 Posted 04/23/2014  12:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Collector-Corner to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I have a wholesale account with NF string, but these guys arent the only ones that banks use for wrappers. There are a lot of other manufacturers that are out there, and I am sure the 3rd party companies that roll products for the Federal Reserve branches buy what ever is ABA and if they are on GSA.

NF string sells one ended crimped rolls that are tubular, not flat. They also sell flat ones. the crimped tubualr ones, they sell a crimper, retail for like 5 bucks, so anyone can make a crimped roll look like a bank rolled coinage.


Some of the bank rolling machines, I am sure the difference is in the way the paper is cut by an automated machine at the end. NF string has a website and may offer more information on what a precrimped roll looks like, and what a roll of paper looks like thats fed into the auto rollers. Your local bank can probably explain the differences, though I doubt they will explain at great length.
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