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Replies: 16 / Views: 2,416 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2661 Posts |
The main thing is to enjoy the day and have fun.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3167 Posts |
Woah! $14 just to see the inventory of 3 dealers? Did I read that wrong?
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Valued Member
 United States
315 Posts |
There's a lot of other vendors too, it's a combined show. :)
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5854 Posts |
If there are dealers that I feel have a good chance of having something that I would be interested in, I may be willing to buy the early bird tickets if they're not too pricey but otherwise I just get the regular tickets. A lot of buying and selling happens during set up and it is likely that many of the bargains have already been snapped up by more knowledgeable dealers. Most importantly, have a good time. Let us know how it goes.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3843 Posts |
Remember that most dealers are wary of credit cards due to the fees associated with them and only take checks with good references.
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Valued Member
 United States
315 Posts |
I don't think the major dealers in my area will be there. From the craigslist ad, it looks like the three are primarily online and ebay businesses.
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
1. Take cash only to enforce your budget. That will also induce you to look for 'best bang for your buck'.
2. Have a look around the whole show, in detail, without buying anything. Make a mental note of anything that interests you.
3. Sit down have a cup of coffee, or eat the lunch you have prepared for yourself the evening before. Talk with other people while you are having lunch. They may be able to give you a few more clues about anything numismatic.
4. Go back to those dealers and items that caught your interest, and negotiate.
If you are visiting from out of town or State stay with relatives, or hole out at a backpackers or YMCA.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
2805 Posts |
I like to look through world coins, because at shows dominated by U.S.A. and Canadian inventory, good deals are much more likely to slip through the cracks! I have found large silver world coins for below melt value in 2x2s - they might have been priced under 2003 silver prices, and then tucked away for 10 years, all but forgotten...
Plus you can get a huge variety of good coins (and silver too) at a low price. It's addictive - I've slowly been pulled away from collecting Canadian coins... (I don't have the budget for the really good ones :P)
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Go to the later one. Save your money. If only a few sellers, they know full well not mubh competition so their prices are going to be excessive. And then too, you'ld have to add $14 to the price of anything you buy. By me all such shows are free. Flea markets usually charge a half to one dollar and usually a few coin dealers there. If I were you I'd just pass on this show.
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Valued Member
 United States
315 Posts |
@nalaberong:what are some good commons to look for? I'm thinking about 90% if possible.
Edited by Superhal 10/05/2013 7:52 pm
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
2805 Posts |
Common silver coins? Write these down (there's no shame in checking your notes):
France (5 francs only): 1969 and earlier Canada and Switzerland: 1967 and earlier U.K.: 1946 and earlier (50% silver), 92.%5 silver is 1918 and earlier Mexican new peso: 1995 and earlier coins of 10 pesos and up have 92.5% centers. Many people don't know this - ask to see new pesos! All coins of 20, 50, or 100 new pesos are desirable. Italy: All monometallic 500 lire coins - more common are the bimetallic coins resembling 2-euro. Spain: 100 pesetas with Francisco Franco Austria: Depends. 10 schillings - 1973 and earlier. 5 schillings - 1968 and earlier. A smaller fraction of 1968 5 schilling coins are copper-nickel, but these had a low mintage and may be worth more than the silver ones. Australia: All non-copper pre-decimal coins, with the same 92.5%/50% silver dates as the UK. Also look for decimal 50-cent coins that are round, not 12-sided. (How to spot a pre-decimal coin? Decimal coins have 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50 on them. Predecimal coins have words for denominations.) Eastern Europe: Most post-Soviet countries have two kinds of coins: those issued before annexation in the 1920s and earlier, and those issued after 1989. The pre-Soviet coins are always worth buying, silver or not.
The more world coin bins you look through, the better sense you get of what's worth it, silver or not. Copper-nickel has a darker kind of look to it, but it still fools me a lot of the time - on the other hand, I have found over 2 ounces of silver from junk bins at one store alone. A local coin show is coming up in November, so I plan to be the terror of the bargain bins, even if it means caking my hands in a layer of international black dust with a measurable thickness. (Don't bring hand sanitizer, bring a tub of wet-wipes.)
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Valued Member
 United States
315 Posts |
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Valued Member
 United States
315 Posts |
I'm back from the show. :)
It was kind of disappointing, virtually no deals. The best deal I found was junk silver at 16.50 per $1 face. One guy had foreign coin grab bags, but nothing old or silver. A few of them kind of just gave up, and listed their prices as melt + $x. Maybe two or three items total were gold at melt.
But, I did buy some scrap sterling bowls and spoons. The bowls I got a really good deal on, like $1 under spot per ozt. I also bought some spoons but they weren't as good a deal, I think I paid $1/gram on those. But, averaged together, I came in right at spot, like 65 cents/gram.
My usual coin guy was there, but he had updated all his prices. it's funny to see all the scratched out prices on the 2X2's. :D
The advice I got in this thread that worked was looking for the old tags, thanks. :D
I can't believe how hard it is to buy gold. Almost everybody is selling 14k jewelry at a minimum of $50/gram ($20/gram would be melt.) Still, watches seem to be the best deal, but it's pretty risky when you can't see the mark on the band.
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Valued Member
 United States
315 Posts |
Today's haul, 308.7 grams of sterling, mostly .925 except one of the spoons...lighter crashed the picture because I wanted to try the silver polish on it. About 65 cents gram silver (only silver, not alloys).  My testing kit is coming this week, then I can really see how I made out. The spoon on the far left looks iffy.
Edited by Superhal 10/07/2013 12:18 am
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Pillar of the Community
Australia
1874 Posts |
With the list of silver world coins, all the Australian coins except the copper pennies and half pennies 1910-1945 are 92.5% 1946-1964 are 50%. Also the 1966 Round 50c are silver as well.
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