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Replies: 69 / Views: 47,498 |
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Pillar of the Community
Mexico
1304 Posts |
Boris, sounds like you are volunteering...give it a stab!
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Valued Member
United States
50 Posts |
I like this Carl, he put on a good show on this topic.
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Valued Member
United States
284 Posts |
harrison2, I think I would rather someone set an example for me first and get caught. Then I know what not to do.  - Boris
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
12437 Posts |
It is worth noting that there were several prosecutions in the late 1960s during the silver melt/export ban so it is certainly not unprecedented. However, I have not found any record of prosecutions relating to the current cent and nickel melt ban. Personally, I would hate to be the first one frogmarched into Federal Court and made an example of 
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Moderator
 United States
188440 Posts |
Quote: There's no reason to ban melting cents today. Most cents go from the mint to the bank to someone's sock drawer. Even if every copper cent disappeared from circulation tomorrow, it wouldn't affect commerce a whit. I have to agree. I believe I have said this once or twice before.
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Valued Member
United States
284 Posts |
What percentage of commerce is digital vs. physical cash nowadays? And of that cash percentage, what percentage is coin? And of that coin percentage, what percentage is pennies? If that percentage of a percentage of a percentage disappears due to melting then what would the effect be?
-- Boris
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Quote: What I'd like to see is a new article of someone who got busted trying to melt his own coins. That would be be impressive! And what, pray tell, would he do with 35# uglybars of .950 copper? Joe Pubic won't believe him, and anyone capable of refining it to .999 will immediately recognize it as melted cents. Granted the mom and pop neighborhood scrap dealer may not be very sophisticated (though even they are gonna question a homemade bar), but the pros know exactly what they're doing. They even sort steel into dozens of alloys, to take advantage of certain markets. You may think it's a big deal to take a pickup truck full of aluminum cans in for recycling. I saw an ad for a major aluminum buyer, promising they can have your check cut in five minutes from the time you drive a 60' semi trailer on to their scales. They just strap the whole thing down, open the rear doors, and lift truck and all, like a giant dump truck.
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Quote: And he said HE CALLED them. Just how many people anywhere would discuss that via a phone call? If someone called a refinery with $50,000 worth of metal to sell, and had a legitimate reason for having that much (like being a coin dealer) why wouldn't they be willing to talk on the phone?
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
Quote: I spoke to a big dealer about scrapping copper cents. This was before the recent law banning cent melting. He said he called half a dozen copper smelters, and none would take cents, even tho he had $20,000 worth. There is the possibility that like the vast majority of the public they thought it was illegal to deface US coins even though it wasn't.
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
Businesses are not "like the vast majority of the public". They learn about which laws apply to them, so they can stay in business.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
838 Posts |
Here in Canada, I was laughed out of my local metal recycler's office for asking if they'd take a few hundred pounds of cents. (Aside: See, even Canada is more sensible than Chicagostan!  ) A year or so later, a coin dealer offered me a reasonable price and I agreed (he liked the idea of hoarding copper). We don't have to physically melt our silver coins to obtain melt value for it. Even though I don't collect tea pots, I'd certainly buy a .999 silver teapot if the price were right! So when enough people catch on, long into the future, the same may be true of copper. And anyway, all you really need is 1 buyer to know what it's worth.
Edited by bibd 05/18/2011 6:42 pm
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Valued Member
United States
183 Posts |
I say it becomes legal to melt when they stop making pennies (or stop making them out of metal and go to plastic or something).
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New Member
United States
29 Posts |
We dont actually need to worry about the illegal issue of melting pennies. I believe that 99.9% people here are coin collectors. Who has a melting facility? Keep your copper cents in their original shape, their bullion value will always be there, and there might be some additional numismatic values. Once melted, all the rare varieties will be gone. you are losing money potentially. Besides, someone mentioned here before that he found 23% of the pennies in circulation to be copper. What I have found is lower, around 15% to 17%. Maybe there is some difference from place to place. I am in southwestern, by the way.
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Valued Member
United States
113 Posts |
I agree with sethhsu. The bullion value will always be there. Also, it will always be known as long as they are as they were minted. Melt them down and it could be anything for all anyone knows.
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New Member
United States
1 Posts |
If it is illegal to use the metal in the coins, then why even make them out of metal? If the metal in the coin has no value to the holder of the coin, then why not just make them out of something non-valuable like fiberglass or something? I thought the reason coins were made out of metal was so they would have some real value, but not being able to use that metal for it's metal value seems to defeat the purpose. Just a thought.
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Replies: 69 / Views: 47,498 |