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New Guy, New Post, Stupid Questions

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First Page  Showing last 15 replies.
Author Previous TopicReplies: 22 / Views: 3,125Next Topic Page 2 of 2
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  10:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
I took the '72 to the Heritage Auction a few years ago in Baltimore, and was offered $1000.00 on the spot by the company's vice president. Some of the coins are stored in plastic tubes (the incirculated dimes/quarters/halves), others are in designated books (Standing Liberty Quarters/Barber/Washington, etc...). The books range from the 1700's (half cents, Half Dimes, .20 pieces) to the 1970's...about the time he stopped collecting.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
12437 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  10:54 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biokemist6 to your friends list
quote:
I hate the idea of knowing they will be melted

Silver coins are not necessarily melted. One method for buying silver is to purchase face value bags of $100-$1000. 90% silver coinage currently has a "melt value(aka spot price)" of about 14x face value so a $1000 face value bag would cost about $14,000. It is a convenient way to own large quantities of silver as opposed to bars which sometimes need to be assayed and do not always have a guaranteed purity unlike US coinage.

quote:
nor will I melt the 1972 SILVER quarter

I am not sure how that would be possible since silver quarters had not been minted since 1964.
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  10:59 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
The coin was checked out thoroughly by Heritage. It is a silver planchet, as would have been used on 1964 and prior quarters; however, it was stamped in 1972.
Pillar of the Community
United States
2797 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  11:29 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SeatedNut to your friends list
eel,

I wish I had your problems! From your description, I wouldn't send anything off for melt. I would acquire the latest edition of Red Book (Forum Mom has them for sale in the "selling" section) and catalog the collection. If you have difficulty assigning grades, visit the local coin shop for their opinion on the non-common pieces. If you want a quick reference on pricing, go to the PCGS page linked at the top left of the forum and check prices (note ... divide the price given in half for a ballpark estimate of value).

Varieties and errors are very hot these days (your '72 silver quarter is an example). The PCGS pages list some of the hottest ones (42/1 Mercury dime, 1955 double die lincoln, etc.). And if you have Morgan and Peace dollars, you would want to check these for possible rare die varieties (http://www.vamworld.com/Morgan+VAMs+By+Date). Also check the threads here on varieties and errors. Most importantly, ask the experts here. Too bad you don't have a digital camera as it's difficult to impossible for us to give an accurate call without a picture.
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  12:35 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
Seated Nut (funny name)... Thanks for your input! again, the thought only crossed my mind because I have a few hundred pounds of commercial sized electrical silver contacts (some about the diameter of a quarter, and twice as thick) still attached to their solid copper or brass armatures, and the price of metal is at a premium now. I took the material to a local place where they were evaluating such items as mine, jewelry, coins, etc... I explained briefly to the fella' of my coins, to which he replied the silver content was of higher value than the collector value. I couldn't, and cannot help but to think that the rise in price for the metal alone should bump up the value of that coin by at least that amount (i.e. if a 1964 quarter is worth ~$2.00, and it is approximately 1/4 ounce of silver, @ $16.00/ounce, the coin should be now worth $6.00... theoretically). Oh well...feel free to correct me in all my wrongness with that analogy...but I think you get the picture. I will hold on to the coins guys...won't sell them for melt. I have a lot of the other "scrap" to focus on, and will leave the coins for another time to think about selling to some appreciative people like all of you. Feel free to continue to post/reply, and thank you all much for helping!
Pillar of the Community
United States
2797 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  12:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SeatedNut to your friends list
quote:
Seated Nut (funny name)...


eel,

It's in reference to my passion for the "Seated" series of coins minted from the 1830's to the 1890's. Others here may agree with your first impression ... whacko in a chair.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  1:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bryan1315 to your friends list
I don't know who you talked to but if the coins are in uncirculated condition then most of them would definitely be worth more to collectors than bullion prices. There is another option that others have failed to mention since you don't have a way to photograph the coins yourself, that is let someone like Susanlynn9 (the one selling redbooks) and Bobby131313 consign the coins to ebay for you, they will take a photo of each coin or lot of coins and sell them on ebay for you for an agreed upon percentage of the final value of the coins, they are very dependable also and can tell you exactly what you have that could bring big bucks that maybe ebay wouldn't be the best place to sell. If I were willing to part with some coins and had no way of knowing what they were worth and only considering selling for bullion then this would probably be my choice because as I said if they are uncirculated coins the collector value could be 100x what bullion value would be
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  1:36 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
Bryan...thanks for your input as well. One of these days I plan to sit with someone and sell the coins. My biggest fear though is choosing a dishonest person. As I've learned, there are those "key" coins, and it takes such a trained eye to determine condition, which ultimately can vary their value a few hundred or thousand dollars either way. Would it be considered "wrong" of me to place the 1909S VDB penny in the mix of a few other wheats just to see what an appraiser might say, enabling me to further trust his/her continued judgement/evaluation? I'd also be concerned about their perceived value of the errors, such as the penny stamped on a silver dime planchet, nickel stamped on a penny planchet, off-centered strikes, etc... Not that I'm saying all numismatic types are sheisty, just that I guess I've been around long enough, and have heard stories. My dad would never sell them, so...when I do sell, I need to know his efforts in collecting them were/are appreciated with today's value in mind, and also that someone with the same passion will appreciate them. Before he died, he learned that his first and only airplane, (which he completely rebuilt/restored - 1939 Taylorcraft) had been purchased by an aircraft museum and now is on display; I think that made him happy too.
Bedrock of the Community
United States
14454 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  1:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bryan1315 to your friends list
that is exactly why I mentioned Susan and Bobby, they are the ones who run this forum and in my opinion are very trustworthy and would give honest opinions on grade and worth, it would be in their own benefit since they would get a percentage of the sales so they need to know and let known what the coin is and have a value in mind. Do I think it is wrong to throw in a key date coin to see how someone reacts, no I don't and actually think it could weed out some unscrupulous dealers also, just be sure when you leave you have that key date coin still in the collection and they didn't palm the coin while you were looking at something else. I don't think this would be needed with the individuals I mentioned though as I would trust them myself with my collection if something were to happen to me, as a matter of fact I have it written down to contact them if something were to happen to me and no one wanted to keep the collection for themself
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  2:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
Thanks again Bryan. I appreciate your love of the hobby will keep that in mind.
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  7:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
Hey guys...I'm back. I understand there was some interest in the 1972 silver quarter out there?
Pillar of the Community
United States
543 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  7:23 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jeremymh to your friends list
Do you have pics, including the edge reeding.
Valued Member
United States
67 Posts
 Posted 04/22/2008  7:27 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add eel to your friends list
Hi Jeremy. I have just gained access to a digital camera, but not sure how to post a pic. Can you, or anyone guide me in the process?
Valued Member
United States
206 Posts
 Posted 04/23/2008  8:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add photoeric21 to your friends list
I can't wait to see this quarter

Has anyone considered the idea it may be a counterfeit? Though it would be odd to counterfeit a coin using a precious metal...
Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts
 Posted 04/24/2008  09:00 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list
I suggest just purchasing a Red Book and a few other books on coins. Sit down and breeze through them and learn something of what you really have. Then you can think about selling or collecting.
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