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Coin Roll Hunting Procedure.. Whats Yours?

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United States
231 Posts
 Posted 03/24/2016  08:00 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add rainman503 to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Looking to see how everyone has different ways of doing CRH. What do you think works best?
Do you set aside specific years to more closely review or a quick look over each coin?
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John1's Avatar
United States
56855 Posts
 Posted 03/24/2016  09:05 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add John1 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Now in my old age I have slowed down a lot. I will look at five rolls of cents,all three sides of every coin. It takes me around one hour. I don't set aside certain coins,I pretty much know what to look for I have been through a few coins as you may know Once in awhile I will put a coin aside for further research.
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Numisma's Avatar
United States
4963 Posts
 Posted 03/24/2016  09:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numisma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
To open the rolls, I hit them on the edge of the table to break them, then push the coins out (I was worried about damaging the coins, but that hasn't been a problem). I then quickly scan through for date/MM, glancing at both sides to check for errors. If it's a keeper date I put in in a bowl on the side, and I also have a pile for other things- errors, foreign, proofs, 2009s, etc. I keep a magnifier handy so I can inspect dates that have varieties listed in the Red Book, as well as a few others like the 2005-D speared bison. I then scoop the coins up and dump them in a bag. The whole process takes about 40 seconds per roll.
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 Posted 03/24/2016  12:35 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add angel2004 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I look at the coins mainly keep the older ones aside. We were able to almost fill a nickel collector's book just going through rolls. (Jefferson's) I as well keep a magnifying glass nearby!
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Numisma's Avatar
United States
4963 Posts
 Posted 03/24/2016  7:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numisma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
You should post your finds in the nickel hunting thread. I would love to see what you've found.
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fistfulladirt's Avatar
United States
4333 Posts
 Posted 03/24/2016  8:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add fistfulladirt to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My method with dimes is to buy about a grand worth minimum, of customer-wrapped dimes, sit down and search the entire lot in one sitting.

Dump into hand, search, re-roll.

Done in an hour.

Move on to other things.
When I listen to LED ZEPPELIN...so do my neighbors...
Roll hunting since '77
Dirt fishing since '72
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Rackster's Avatar
United States
4809 Posts
 Posted 03/24/2016  9:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Rackster to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
My technique is closest to John's. I will tear off/unfold one end of the roll and push them out in a single file. I examine each coin looking for distinguishing features; doubling, trails, rotation, clashes, etc. under a lighted loop lamp and/or stereo microscope at 20x. I move quicker on some dates, slower on others relative to the number of attributed coins for a given date/mm that I'm looking for. I will try to get through 5 rolls an evening; perhaps 1-1.5 hours depending on how much I'm distracted by CCF or if I'm looking up a detail about a variety. I sort my coins according to a simple 8.5"x11" sheet of paper divided into sections. For example, the sheet I have for cents is divided into S mint, D mint, 2009, 1982, error/variety, AU/BU coppers, AU/BU zincs, foreign coinage. I then sort each section according to storage destination, place select items in flips/folded post-its, ID a few of the better variety/error coins, and put the rest into labeled storage for a rainy day cataloging event.

For a box of nickels, I generally keep less than 15 nickels.

For a box of cents, I generally keep around 100 specimens most of them being error/variety coins.
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