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Replies: 19 / Views: 4,399 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1358 Posts |
Quote: Don't like the toonie. Okay with the loonies, but they get worn easily and lose their lustre in a few months of circulating. Yeah, same with the Golden dollars here. A couple days in a pocket and bright golden coins turn dull, dirty and brown. How are the original 1987 dollars doing? What's the lowest grade you've seen a coin wear to just from circulating?
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
902 Posts |
Paper bucks don't weigh down your pocket so much, plus I could have done without having to collect all these loonies & toonies.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1554 Posts |
 My "cut off" collecting date is 1967, so loonies, toonies and goonies don't effect me! Glenn 
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Bedrock of the Community
Canada
10743 Posts |
Quote: My "cut off" collecting date is 1967,  As, far as loonies and toonies, don't care that much for the toonie but, when the Government says that's all you got you have to use them. 
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Valued Member
Canada
316 Posts |
At first, I didn't like it.But got used to it pretty quickly. Now I wouldn't like if they came back to paper but don't want the 5$ to become a coin neither.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts |
Glenzy, he's talking about circulation coins, not collector coins...
Anyways, they're fine. I like the toonie and I hate dimes. Loonies are fine but they can't buy you anything. They're only good for doing your laundry.
Not many people carry 10-20 loonies and toonies. Think about it, and really think about it. That means that you received change 10-20 times from 5s, 10s, 20s, whatever. Are you really making 10-20 separate purchases in a day - everyday? How much $ would one have to start off with if this were the case? They don't weigh down the pocket, everyone with this argument is speculating without even thinking. They're fine. If you have that many why aren't you going to the bank to exchange them for 20s? This being said, $5 coins wouldn't suit our needs because that's what the banknote is for.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1358 Posts |
Quote: Loonies are fine but they can't buy you anything. They're only good for doing your laundry. Eeesh... Three of my last five cash purchases were for a dollar or less: a postage stamp, two test-taking booklets, and... laundry  The other two were less than $2 each.. But the problem mentioned I guess is what happens when dollars become "change". They get stored up, not spent. Most here don't use coins; just save them up and dump them in a Coinstar. Not what I do; I like using exact change and stuff.
Edited by coinsearcher83 02/25/2012 10:46 pm
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10048 Posts |
Libertad said, Quote: They don't weigh down the pocket, everyone with this argument is speculating without even thinking. I do not think I understand this. Although it seems simple enough - it confuses me. Other Canadians are saying the coins are heavy in their pockets. I assume this is from them using them and their personal experience. Please explain how this is speculation? Or am I missing something obvious?
How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash? Download and read: Grading the graders Costly TPG ineptitude and No FG Kennedy halveshttps://ln5.sync.com/dl/7ca91bdd0/w...i3b-rbj9fir2
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Pillar of the Community
Germany
1064 Posts |
When notes become so little in value they have a tendency of doing nothing. I live in China and have 1 yuan notes (maybe 15 cents worth) and lower just hanging around my desk because I can't be bothered to have them in my wallet. Coins I will actively try and use up but for some reason the small notes I hardly ever do that. I was in Korea over Spring Festival and the 1000 won banknote which is like a $1 was very useful though, for the subway anyway. But coins do help with spending, when you have too many you can feel it, and you just whack open your wallet and pour them out and count them quickly, having a bunch of notes not in order is much harder, especially in the US where they are the same colour, same size.
I worked in a Supermarket right by the Rocky Mountain National Park and the till would either lack dollar bills all day or have so many you couldn't close the till, grrr. Why? No idea.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
2781 Posts |
would be a total fan if the loonie was a nickel voyager instead of a dull brass duck.
the twoonie is at least cool being bi-metalic but for every coin introduced they should demonitize another (ie looine for penny, twoonie for nickel). then again I also think they should circulate 50 cent pieces :)
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Valued Member
Canada
457 Posts |
For the most part I love the loonie and toonie, but I have to admit all I do with them is throw them in my cars ashtray and use them in the car wash, When my kids lived at home they would steal them .... I mean borrow them  from me but in the last couple years they are really starting to stack up around the house. I have recently put them in rolls, now I just need to take them to the bank $650 in toonies and $400 in loons  I keep hearing rumors about a $5 coin I'm not sure how I feel about that, I have noticed I very rarely get $5 bills in my wallet most time the person working the till finds it easier to just give change. The only time my pockets get right full of change is on the day before X-mass when I do all my shopping LOL
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts |
...and they'll get even lighter this year with the introduction of steel loonies and toonies.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
695 Posts |
When the loonie first came about, I was dead set against it (I was young, didn't have a lot of money, and figured that I would be much more likely to have a coin fall out of my pocket and get lost than it would for a paper bill).
Now that they have been around for some time (and $1 isn't a lot of money to me anymore) I like the loonie and the toonie as well. I must admit that I do miss the paper bills from time to time.
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Valued Member
Canada
91 Posts |
IMO I love both the Loonie and Toonie. It has got to be the easiest and best way to save your money. I find that if I have bills I keep them in my wallet and tend to spend them . But if I have loonies and toonies in my wallet they get to heavy and annoying so they usually get removed every day and placed into a change Jar (After close inspection for errors and key dates and such :P ) After a while you will be surprised how much and fast this adds up to 2-300 dollars easy. And ALl the coin collecetors out there I think can find a few good ways of spending 2-300.. Am I right...
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
695 Posts |
^ Great point. My wife and I usually put our loonies/toonies in a piggy bank for our daughter. Every couple of months we empty it and bring the money to the bank and put it in her RESP (registered education savings plan). It is amazing how quickly they add up.
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Replies: 19 / Views: 4,399 |
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