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Replies: 17 / Views: 3,298 |
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Just being bicentennial in themselves gives them no extra value. Too many of them were minted for that
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5861 Posts |
Standard bicentennial coinage (as opposed to the special proof and/or silver versions) are in the strange position of simultaneously being not worth anything special due to the vast amounts minted and extremely hard to find because everybody hoarded them thinking they were unusual. Collectors won't pay anything extra for them because so many were minted, but if you actually want one you'd probably have to pay a premium to get one off ebay or a dealer. I dunno. We all know they aren't worth anything special and never will be, but you still might be able to sell a roll of them on ebay at double or even triple face value if you tried.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1302 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
526 Posts |
The Bicentennial Silver Quarter is only 40% silver as well, it is not 90% like its cousins.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2602 Posts |
cc: That's a very nice analysis of the bicentennial quarter. Thanks for sharing!
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
I've told the story of myself and a friend hoarding those for well over 30 years. At a coin show not long ago, I went around asking dealers if they wanted to buy them. All said no except one that offered $0.24 each sort of saying what he thought those were worth. If you need the room, spend them.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5861 Posts |
Quote:I wrote this guide for collecting Bicentennial quarters for coinweek.com: http://www.coinweek.com/coin-guide/..and-rewards/It's worth a read. If you have any questions after you read it, let me know. I think I may have asked this the last time you posted that link, but are there any mintage figures for the proof, silver, and silver proof versions of the bicentennial quarters? I've always assumed those were more collectible due to lower mintage figures and silver content (with the exception of the non-silver proofs).
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1116 Posts |
cc99999 thank you for that really eye opening explanation of grading population. I would have to believe that similiar grading range populations occur for all coins. After reading your article I am kind of understanding the price breaks that one sees on numismedia where the price really jumps.
Thanks for the info.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2272 Posts |
Quote: cc99999 thank you for that really eye opening explanation of grading population. I would have to believe that similiar grading range populations occur for all coins. After reading your article I am kind of understanding the price breaks that one sees on numismedia where the price really jumps.
Thanks for the info.
One huge difference with the bicentennial quarters is that they are a one year type coin. This makes the specific demand potentially very high. People simply have no choice but to get one of these if they desire a complete set of US type or clad quarters. Actually these belong in all sorts of collections from bicentennial memorabilia to coins with drums on them. The coins come nice generally but they are not often both gemmy and fully struck.
Time don't fly, it bounds and leaps.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1302 Posts |
I have sold several rolls over the years of BU bicentennials. I get about $18 per $10 roll... and I don't have to beg to get it. So they are worth more than face.
As far as silver collector issues- I'd say this goes for all but the 1971-S Ike, you need MS-67 for it to be moderately desirable coin, and MS-68 to be collectible. The 1971-S doesn't come in 68 and typically you won't find them in MS-65. The quarter should come MS-67 as a typical grade.
Get these types of coins for fun, if it appeals to you- but the business strikes in the high end is where the potential is.
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Valued Member
United States
255 Posts |
I have about 50 bicentennials that are still in the individual plastic. They are not silver. Would these be "business strike?" If not, what is business strike? Thanks for any response!
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Business strikes are basically coins meant for circulation
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1195 Posts |
Spend them at your local coin shop at face, turn them and a buck into a silver quarter.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3486 Posts |
To cc99999, As one numismatist writer to another I took a look at your piece. You write very well, both content and structure. If we do not do so, who will? AH, the drummer boy! Among all of the modern coins by far my favorite design. And it DOES still turn up in pocket change.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3486 Posts |
To Young-Skyler, I have kept one or two nice examples for myself and I have spent the rest. Perhaps you might do the same.
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