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Collectors/Hoarders Causing Structural Damage?

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 Posted 09/17/2015  06:23 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jdiablo30 to your friends list
I work in construction and have so for many years. Weight is a factor for sure. In my old house I had to go underneath in the basement and support the floors from underneath for a big safe we had in one room. A structure can support a lot of weight IF and I mean IF built right. Over time though it will begin to sag if it is not supported. If your on the 1st floor and have a solid concrete foundation sub you can put a tank in and be good. On the other hand if you have a old house I would take weight into consideration. This is all for future protection of course so why not protect your assets ?
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 Posted 09/17/2015  07:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add davec13 to your friends list
This is the only thing I have ever heard of when it came to coins causing a problem with a house.
http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news...lector_x.htm

It could also have just been a random bolt of lightning.

not sure why the link isn't working. Here is the interesting part of the article.


Quote:
He stored the fifty-cent rolls in 559 boxes in his basement.

He documented the contents and date of each roll in a loose-leaf binder that is now 3-inches thick. "He is a bit meticulous," Violet said.

Her husband protests good-naturedly that he was not obsessed: "Sometimes I'd go two or three weeks without touching a penny." He pauses: "Then, I'd roll for two or three hours. It was very relaxing."

Until lightning struck, twice.

Electrical storms knocked out his living room television, directly above his penny collection. "I thought the copper in pennies may be attracting lightning," Sukie says.

Edited by davec13
09/17/2015 11:39 am
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 Posted 09/17/2015  10:37 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jdiablo30 to your friends list
Davec that posted link doesn't work.
Valued Member
United States
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 Posted 09/17/2015  3:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thetracer to your friends list
While we don't store bags of silver dollars like Redfield did; didn't he have a special room built for them and their weight?
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 Posted 09/17/2015  8:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add streg2 to your friends list
On another coin forum there were some pictures of a guy that had full 55 gallon plastic trash cans containing Lincoln cents in his garage. I don't remember how many he had I but think there were more than 20 of them.
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 Posted 09/17/2015  10:50 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Steele to your friends list

Quote:
I just did a quick search for live loads in residential buildings and one source I came up with said 40 pounds per square foot.


I weigh significantly more than forty pounds and when standing my feet take up less than one square foot.
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 Posted 09/17/2015  11:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Parklane64 to your friends list
Just don't loogle for people whom place a pool on their deck.....
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 Posted 09/19/2015  12:56 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CelticKnot to your friends list

Quote:
On another coin forum there were some pictures of a guy that had full 55 gallon plastic trash cans containing Lincoln cents in his garage.

I think I remember that and it was also an ebay auction. They were big grey Brute trash cans. Wanted like $50k or something for them.
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 Posted 09/19/2015  01:04 am  Show Profile   Check Pacificoin's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add Pacificoin to your friends list
Evidence yet again that some people just have way too much time on their hands .
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 Posted 09/19/2015  1:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CelticKnot to your friends list
Perhaps, but I would love to have had just one of those Brutes to go through while wasting my time watching NCAA and NFL football! Not sure I could have gotten through one of those bad boys in a single season!
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 Posted 09/19/2015  1:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Finn235 to your friends list
I saw a listing along the trash cans, but it was 3-5 oil drums of common date wheats. I could see something like that causing structural damage, but you would have to be pretty dumb to think that was a good idea anywhere but on a concrete slab in your garage/basement.
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 Posted 09/19/2015  1:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CelticKnot to your friends list

Quote:
...but you would have to be pretty dumb to think that was a good idea anywhere but on a concrete slab in your garage/basement.

Indeed. Which is why this is probably an urban legend. Maybe we can get the Mythbusters to test this one.
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 Posted 09/19/2015  2:49 pm  Show Profile   Check 52Raymo's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add 52Raymo to your friends list
Oregon coin geek.....*** GO BEAVS ! ! ! ***
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 Posted 09/21/2015  10:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Steele to your friends list
Man! the things that could have been in those drums makes me weep that he just cashed it in at a coinstar.
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 Posted 09/23/2015  12:07 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add CelticKnot to your friends list
Wow. Quite a stash.


Quote:
"It takes pennies to make money. They're worth something or they wouldn't make them," he said.

Well, I guess they're worth something, but we know the cost more to make than they're worth and have for a while. Anyone know when cents started to cost more than a cent to make?

With inflation he would have been far better off searching those hundreds of thousands of cents for valuable years/mints, errors, and varieties. Or, duh, investing them. Or both.
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