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Replies: 23 / Views: 16,633 |
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Valued Member
United States
473 Posts |
When searching pennies, I generally do it for the coppers. Before you know it, each pre-82 will be worth a nickel in melt value and we'll start seeing them disapear. Also, with the release of the new Cent next year, the Memorials from the 60s should start to slowly gain in value, in Numismatic terms.
Wheaties are still out there and in large numbers. Working at the register at my job, I generally find 2-3 a day, 1916 in AG condition being the oldest. Old nickels are much more common, but silver dimes/quarters are nearly impossible (1 quarter/0 dime) in the 4+ months I've been working for this company.)
"When I run them through my copper sorter I also spot more and grab them too"
Interesting Dan, very very interesting....where does one purchase a copper sorter and how much should I be expecting to spend?
--Gary
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Valued Member
United States
60 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
259 Posts |
I do not have time to get a $50 bag, or a mint box but I went thru 6 rolls the other day and did not find one wheatie! I did find a 1962-D in AU condition, though. It is alot of fun!
John
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2049 Posts |
Ok there was mention of a copper sorter earlier and after doing some research, I found some made by Ryedale: http://www.ryedalecoin.com/Products.htmlThere are some videos showing how these look and work. Dan...is this the coin sorter you are referring to?
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Valued Member
United States
57 Posts |
quote: Ok there was mention of a copper sorter earlier and after doing some research, I found some made by Ryedale:
http://www.ryedalecoin.com/Products.html
There are some videos showing how these look and work. Dan...is this the coin sorter you are referring to?
Yes, that is what I have. I posted a link to that site when I first started on this forum and it got deleted because I was too new to the forum. It is a great machine. I have the $350 model. The company owner, Andy, is a good guy to work with and very honest. It is a fun machine to work with. feed the coins in the top and they come out the front, copper to the left and zinc to the right. Ocassionally the machine will jam, but that is to be accepted. Will any vending machine take a bent penny or two stuck together? Also I had one jam because a 1833 1/8th Real got stuck in the chute. It is just a bit oversize from our cent.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2049 Posts |
Yes, that is what I have. I posted a link to that site when I first started on this forum and it got deleted because I was too new to the forum. It is a great machine. I have the $350 model. The company owner, Andy, is a good guy to work with and very honest. It is a fun machine to work with. feed the coins in the top and they come out the front, copper to the left and zinc to the right. Ocassionally the machine will jam, but that is to be accepted. Will any vending machine take a bent penny or two stuck together? Also I had one jam because a 1833 1/8th Real got stuck in the chute. It is just a bit oversize from our cent. --- Ok good that's what I thought. Do you feel that the machine is really accurate and also do you know how it determines which are copper and which are zinc? I have noticed after searching through 10000 plus pennies that the copper ones seem thicker (in addition to the weight difference) so do you know if it weighs each coin individually or does it go by thickness?
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Valued Member
United States
57 Posts |
quote: Do you feel that the machine is really accurate and also do you know how it determines which are copper and which are zinc?
Yes, I feel it is very accurate. Not 100%, but so close as not to worry. It is much more accurate then a human that is tired of looking at all those dates and throws one in the wrong pile. It works like a super miniture metal detector. There is a slot where you put in a known 95% copper cent. Then the coins are fed past a small metal detector and each coin is compared to the 95% coin. If it matches it falls into the left chute, if it does not match the electronic signiture of the 95% coin it is re-directed off to the right. It can do this over 300 times per minute. That is a $25 box of cents in less than 10 min.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2049 Posts |
Yes, I feel it is very accurate. Not 100%, but so close as not to worry. It is much more accurate then a human that is tired of looking at all those dates and throws one in the wrong pile.
It works like a super miniture metal detector. There is a slot where you put in a known 95% copper cent. Then the coins are fed past a small metal detector and each coin is compared to the 95% coin. If it matches it falls into the left chute, if it does not match the electronic signiture of the 95% coin it is re-directed off to the right. It can do this over 300 times per minute. That is a $25 box of cents in less than 10 min. --- Wow that is pretty cool. I agree that a tired human is going to be prone to many mistakes. Especially with such small coins with small dates/mint marks. I do mine in small batches but I am seriously considering getting one of these.
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Replies: 23 / Views: 16,633 |