| Author |
Replies: 29 / Views: 3,857 |
|
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
880 Posts |
I started to skip some of the reply's, but it seems like everyone here mentioned it. I always pay paper money to get change... But here's somethign else. Check out the paper section of this forum. Soon you'll at least find yourself checking for star notes. Even if they are just to sell off for your coin hobby. Then you'll pick up on ladder notes, and some other things. I don't care for paper money much yet, but I can see myself getting into it one day. I want an all 7's barcode bill :)
|
|
Rest in Peace
United States
1943 Posts |
As far as the tax, this is state sales tax and it is different in each state. In PA we don't pay tax on collectable coins but we do on paper money.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
307 Posts |
I do the same now with change. Luckily my eyesight is such that I can check dates quickly so as not to get any funny looks from cashiers or by-standers.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
659 Posts |
If you want to get some good coins, try going to your bank and buying rolls of coins. Be careful though, roll searching is addicting! $50 dollars in pennies a week isn't enough for me any more, and $10 used to last me weeks!
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
508 Posts |
I always check my pocket change but never find anything good. Like ever. I take a different approach and order boxes of coins to search through. You gotta limit yourself however, because if you ask for too many boxes the bank may just not want to deal with you. You also have to keep in mind the returning process of all those coins. Sure dumping them into a coin machine is super easy but the banks pay good money to send those bags of coins away, and may end up charging you past a certain dollar amount returned. IMO searching boxes is your best bet for finding some neat stuff. With pennies I average roughly 10-15 wheat pennies per box, you might even pull an Indian Head cent if you get lucky. The same with nickels/dimes/and half dollars. You can still find silver dimes and halves, even the occasional War Nickel too. Ahhh the excitement when you pull your first Buffalo or V nickel, or your first Franklin or Walking Liberty. Someone mentioned finding a wheatie on the floor of McDonalds, well the other day at work they removed this olllld vending machine from the break room, and underneath it was a beautiful 1935 wheatie staring at me... Only problem is there was this black goo surrounding the rim of coin and it was stuck to the floor. Luckily nobody was around to watch me struggle for a minute to get this thing loose. I ended up using my blade to pry it off, but sadly I gave the reverse a nasty scratch in the process! >.< Still have to remove the goo from Lincolns head. 
Edited by Deltron 04/01/2011 9:22 pm
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
592 Posts |
can't look at....won't look at..please no . no can't look at serial #'s on bills!! Just Say No To Currency Collecting!
|
|
Valued Member
United States
99 Posts |
Quote: I want an all 7's barcode bill :) You and I both, I have had my eye out for one of those as well. There are a couple on ebay that are close but they aren't solid 7's.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
307 Posts |
My eyes wandered into the "Tip Jar" at a Subway Sandwich restaurant just now.... If I only wanted to leave a 50 cent tip, would it be wrong to make change for myself if I saw two quarters I wanted in there?
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
880 Posts |
@Yonatin - I saw a PPQ67 $1 bill on ebay all 7's that was selling for something like 4grand. I thought to myself - it'll never sell. I never looked back to see if it did, but I can't believe that price tag.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
4778 Posts |
Speaking of tip jars, does anyone find themselves looking at the coins in the glass charity box things for an unusual amount of time at McDonalds when waiting for their order? Or at any other fast food place? I can't help myself!!
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
659 Posts |
Me, I do that all the time, even though it just drives me crazy when I see a silver dime in there.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
460 Posts |
Watch out, before you know it you will be spending more time going through coins then you have time for. I get odd looks in line when I lean over to see what a cashier has in the drawer and then ask for different change. I even asked for "small coins".
I am 29 years old and have been into coins for about 4 years now. Before I was into baseball cards (until the card companies ruined it). This helped me on the obsession that is numismatics.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
234 Posts |
I think there's a 12 step program out there for folks like yourself who are losing control to their addiction. My wife has tried the interdiction path on me a time or two, but little has come of those efforts. Just hope someday they don't find me face down in a pile of quarters with a roll of halves clutched in one hand. Coin collecting addicts ... what a terrible scourge on this earth of ours.
|
|
Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Quote: As far as the tax, this is state sales tax and it is different in each state. In PA we don't pay tax on collectable coins but we do on paper money.
As usual government wierdo stuff. By me at all coin stores they charge sales taxes and usually have to write a receipt. Yet the same person at a coin show charges no taxes at all. And as you go from area to area, the taxes change drastically. In Chicago they are now 10.25% on everything except some items and no one knows what those are. Yet you cross a street and it drops to 9%. Go a few miles further and now 7.5%. Illinois is nuts. And at a flea market you can buy anything ever made and no taxes of any kind.
|
| |
Replies: 29 / Views: 3,857 |