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Replies: 48 / Views: 16,855 |
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New Member
United States
6 Posts |
you think the pics are fake?
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New Member
United States
6 Posts |
I will try and find a pro to take a look at it
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10038 Posts |
Do a "ring test." Spin the '65 on a piece of glass that is sitting on something solid. Then spin a clad. As the coins settle, the silver will have a more distinctive, high pitched ring. The clad will not. If in doubt still, spin a known silver and see what it sounds like first. I used to find silver quarters in large quantities of quarters by dumping the whole batch onto a sheet of plate glass and listening for them. In fact, I did this so much (with nickels, dimes, and quarters), many years ago, that I can tell normally tell what kind of change people have in their pocket (not how much - just what kind of coins and if they are silver).
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
Well three months and we haven't heard the results of Chucksters Specific Gravity test. I think we can guess what the result was. As for Thomas Cambels coin, the very first thing we need to know is what it weighs
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3294 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4778 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1151 Posts |
I saw one of those sensers before. They work great. They tested it on 14 kt gold and it came back as something like 13.9856.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3294 Posts |
Sadly, I think they cost $10,000+
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New Member
United States
6 Posts |
i have a silver 1950 quarter and the 1965 quarter pictured is not silver, but I found 2 1965 quarters and they both have the copper around the edge, so I dont know what the pictured quarter is made of?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4132 Posts |
Were you ever able to get an accurate weight? That seems like the next step.
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New Member
United States
6 Posts |
no, I dont have a accurate scale, sorry
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Moderator
 United States
16679 Posts |
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
 , chuckster! Too heavy for silver, the extra weight could come from plating.
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Rest in Peace
United States
9104 Posts |
 , Thomas! I'm going to  and say that the last digit looks altered. IOW, silver, but not 1965.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3546 Posts |
Hi, Quote: Silver will ring all the way up and down most of the time. Its not a guaranteed test if you flip it wrong. I personally feel that the least expensive, easily repeatable, and reasonably accurate method to ascertain mint-produced silver content within any well documented coin should be done using sound vibrations. Upon tapping any coin with a hard object logic should dictate that a 90% Ag US silver dollar, for example, should have a somewhat different sound wavelength profile compared to a 90% Ag US silver dime and a dramatically different sound wavelength profile compared to any copper clad coin etc. Apparently a free shareware program entitled Audacity, http://wiki.audacityteam.org/wiki/A...ki_Home_Page is available that allows anyone to easily record and graphically display the sound of any desired audible source: ie.: a tapped silver coin. Having never attempted to use this software it sure would be nice if a ‘documented' streamline method already exists using this software that would ‘easily' allow a user to see the tested sound wavelength form of an ‘unknown' coin superimposed upon the sound wavelength form of a ‘known' silver coin. To obtain consistency and repeatability a suspect coin's sound would have to be recorded by dropping it from the same height upon the same type of substrate also used on a known silver content coin. Just imagine how quickly suspect coins could be verified: with or without tarnish and not having to worry about the method of ringing the coin. The resulting comparative wavelengths could be saved on the drive of a laptop computer and selectively referenced in the future when these silver coins are presented to a skeptical potential buyer etc. Finding research addressing my questions via an interactive tutorial or any suggestions would truly lessen the steepness of the learning curve and save valuable time... This type of software has already been discussed at CCF but no one has yet addressed a way to superimpose the frequency graphs upon one another to more accurately differentiate each coin with a 'control' coin etc. Thanks in advance for any ideas on this subject. mdpmedia
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Replies: 48 / Views: 16,855 |
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