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Replies: 16 / Views: 717 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
8784 Posts |
Basing this on no silver quarters and the approximate amount of quarters in the jug, I would say that's a couple grand over what it's worth. I am being conservative though and being a searcher of many different things I would probably give it some leeway.
-makecents-
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
74707 Posts |
Most likely not. You'd hope that you can try to recoup some of the cost by searching for varieties and errors.
Errers and Varietys.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6554 Posts |
If you believe Google, a 5 gallon jug can hold about 14000 quarters, which is $3500. YMMV.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
2207 Posts |
I would rather have the 1996 Ford F150 that probably went for less... 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
19203 Posts |
Yes, a tad over on the quarters. I'd want to know more about that '96 F150....
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5210 Posts |
Quote: I'd want to know more about that '96 F150.... It said it had a 5 speed stick so it most likely was a 4.9L straight six not a 5.0 V8.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
659 Posts |
I had filled a 4-liter jug with quarters a few years ago and it held right at $1000 in quarters.
Working a bit of math, the 5-gallon jug should hold right at $4,725 in quarters.
Plus, I would not want to wrap them and dispose of them.
Edited by fplagge 06/07/2026 7:45 pm
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
10595 Posts |
Were they taking side bets on how long before somebody hits the bottom wrong and it blows out? 
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Moderator
 United States
189340 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
6554 Posts |
Quote: Were they taking side bets on how long before somebody hits the bottom wrong and it blows out? Indeed. I saved all of my change as a kid in a big glass jug like that. When it was time to move it, it was tremendously heavy. So much so that it probably shouldn't have been sitting on my bedroom floor without extra support to avoid stressing the wood. Bumping it against anything was a big concern—and those coins were a real bear to get back out the narrow spout!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
659 Posts |
A cupro-nickel quarter weighs 5.67 grams.
2000 of them weighs 11340 grams.
11340 grams = 25 lbs. (standard, not troy)
2000 quarters divide into 14000 quarters seven times.
seven times 25 (lbs.) = 175 lbs.
Therefore, 14000 cupro-nickel quarters weigh 175 lbs.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
19964 Posts |
Seems very high!
Many years ago a friend of mine had the same thing, he also saved them for 30 years. He asked me to get rid of them, it sucked because I don't collect quarters. LOL I'm positive I tossed a lot of nice 1970's/80's BU coins - I just didn't want to deal with them other than taking them to the bank. I only found maybe 20-25 silvers in the whole thing, they were junk silver. I suspect this bottle is the same.
Lincoln Cent Lover!VERDI-CARE™ INVENTOR https://verdi.care/
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Valued Member
United Kingdom
387 Posts |
Moving that glass jar is going to be hard work!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3663 Posts |
On the other hand, a warehouse-store-size 43.5 oz plastic coffee can holds just about 4,400 cents, weighs just under 30 pounds filled, and makes an absolutely perfect doorstop, even out here in the windy Front Range. 
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Moderator
 United States
189340 Posts |
Quote:On the other hand, a warehouse-store-size 43.5 oz plastic coffee can holds just about 4,400 cents, weighs just under 30 pounds filled, and makes an absolutely perfect doorstop, even out here in the windy Front Range. Sounds like a plan. 
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