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Replies: 18 / Views: 4,171 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4132 Posts |
The problem with the dollars is that there was no demand for them. There is demand for quarters and there isn't some sort of statutory minimum mintage. They don't mint more than are needed.
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Quote: If the mint does another big set of quarters after the ATBs, then there's just going to be a gigantic surplus of quarters, if there isn't already. They mint 100s of thousands of them a year out of need. Theres no alternative to a quarter unless you prefer to have a ton of smaller change. Dollar coins have a bill counter part that were easier to use. There was no need for dollar coins and like fluffy said they HAD to mint a certain number instead of basing it on need. No matter what the design the quarter mintage will be the same In fact I would bet that between change, tolls, vending machines ect quarters are the most used coin in the US
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Valued Member
United States
310 Posts |
Please no...no more gimmicky coins.
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Valued Member
United States
417 Posts |
How about quarters for famous restaurants, then you could have a fun place to go visit as well.
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Valued Member
United States
470 Posts |
Unfortunately, the America the beautiful series is not slated to end. After these 10 years there will be a renewal for another 10 years of parks and monuments. The mint is set for quarter ideas for forseeable future.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1151 Posts |
Or.. here's a good idea.. we go back to a better design, with Liberty, instead of dead presidents?
The dead president part doesn't bother me, it just seems to be more difficult, classic designs were so simple
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Moderator
 United States
189767 Posts |
My idea, proposed in another thread, was to schedule the second round of ATB Quarters to end in 2031 instead of 2033 (some years will just have to deal with six coins instead of five). This gives us the opportunity to have a Washington Tricentennial Quarter with a new permanent design in 2032.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
965 Posts |
How about a series of quarters featuring each of the signers of the declaration of independence?
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
I like Jbucks idea for the commemorative quarter, I wish theyd do more of the ATBs each year as well not for any real reason other than I hate waiting. I would have been perfectly happy if they did all 50 State Quarters the same year too lol
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
I like Canadapenny's idea, however, I'm also burnt out on the ever-changing quarters and I don't even collect them. They've been going on since I was 11 and I'm 24 now. Enough!! STOP THE INSANITY!! How much do you suppose our already-bleeding Mint is spending each year on designing new dies for these? Too much.
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
They arent spending any where close to what you think on the designs. The minting of them alone more than pays for it as do the collectors and new collectors who like the series. The biggest expense is probably making the dyes which they will have to do regardless of the design as long as they dont change the size requiring a new press.
The old design was tried before they started all this especially since its basically the same as the bill. At the very least it needed to be switched from being the coin version of the bill
Edited by basebal21 08/18/2012 01:13 am
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Valued Member
United States
61 Posts |
Having all the state capitals would be interesting. However, I LOVE the designs on the ATB Quarters. They are all breathtaking. In my opinion, they have the best designs of any non commemorative coin made since the early to mid 20th century.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
I don't see much practical use as a teaching aid of a "tool" that takes 10 years to teach you about 50 places. When I was in the third grade we didn't have State Quarters and we learned the 50 states AND their capitals in three weeks, not ten years. I look at all these State Quarters and president dollars and NA dollars and I remember back in the 80's when the official position of the Treasury dept was that designs should not change and that having more than one design in circulation would lead to confusion in the market place because no one would be sure what was a real coin and what wasn't. And that it would be a boon for counterfeiters because people would just think the fakes was just another design. That attitude caused them to fight design change every step of the way. Talk about doing a 180.
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
5178 Posts |
IIRC, the bill that introduced ATB Quarters said that the immediate next design has to involve Washington crossing the Delaware (i.e. something similar to the New Jersey State Quarter). Admittedly that could work quite well for the tricentennial... if anyone cares of course.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
I just think it's ludicrous. These days when I open a roll of quarters for my drawer it's like looking at a bag of chocolate coins. The designs are beautiful, yes, but most people don't care. Usually the only time I can get a gape out of even a kid is by handing over a Sac or Prez, because people are so unused to golden currency.
And Conder, this is an excellent point. The other night at work I had a guy come in who I think probably immigrated here in the last ten years (he had an accent, but it was very slight and his English was very good), and he handed me two tens for gas: a 1996 and a 2008. As soon as he saw me spread them out to count (the tens came with a small stack of ones), he gasped and tried to take the 1996 back, apologising for handing me a counterfeit. I had to explain to him that no, US currency designs have changed twice since I was born and the colored bill he's more used to has actually been in circulation for less than ten years, and that the black and white bill he wanted back was the design from when I was in grade school. I showed him that the watermarks matched and the magic pen worked (which doesn't actually mean anything, but it's a nice tool for situations like this which have, in fact, happened before), and only then would he let me take the bill. If that's what happens with a bill design that was ten years old when it was changed, how much are we confusing people by changing our coinage five times a year?
ETA: Also, Conder, excellent point on the whole "ten years" thing. I remember doing the states in two weeks in fourth grade, learning them in bundles of five by singing Fifty Nifty United States (which is still how I come up with states I can't remember, shush). We did the state capitols in a week in fifth, which is probably why I only remember half of them, but once upon a time I could have recited them all and didn't need a quarter to do it.
Edited by ninamason 08/18/2012 6:04 pm
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