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On Testing World Coins For Silver Content

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KurtS's Avatar
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5318 Posts
 Posted 12/28/2008  9:26 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add KurtS to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
As a follow-up to my brief demo on measuring specific gravity, I decided to pursue a bit more research after a random test suggested several Swiss coins had a notably lower SG than expected for the .835 silver alloy. This got me wondering if many coins are underweight for silver content...and could I accurately tell?

To verify my methods were accurate, I first tested a control group of 9 bronze or cupro-nickel coins where composition probably varies little, given less economic motive. In the chart below, the darker vertical bar shows the actual specific gravity for each coin, and the lighter top bar indicates any disparity between measured values and specs for each coin. Interestingly, the discrepancy only varies from 0-1.6%, which I consider remarkably low considering my homemade testing methods against any possible variances in coin alloys.

On-Testing-World-Coins-For-Silver-Content

Coins represented by the control sample.
1. US Lincoln bronze cent, average of 3 coins: 1958, 1968, 1972.
2. Canada bronze cent, average of 3 coins: 1943, 1962, 1965.
3. Australia 1989 bronze 2 cent
4. Australia 1943-m bronze halfpenny
5. Finland 1 Markka (cupro-nickel)
6. US 2006 CuNi 5c
7. Iceland Bronze 1956 1 Eyrir (to see accuracy for smaller coins)
8. Poland CuNi 1995 1 Zloty
9. Canada Ni 5c

Given the apparently close tolerances of the control group, I was then surprised by the degree SG varied for those silver coins I tested. While some were very close to minting specifications, others were under density by as much as 6.8%, as in the case of one 1943 Newfoundland 10c. This suggests to me the actual silver content was often lower than official mint specifications. Whether those coins were intentionally debased is unknown, but such a practice would certainly add to seigniorage revenues already enjoyed by the issuing mint.

Similar to the control group chart, the second depicts the measured SG against calculations based on mint specifications. Note: the vertical scale between both charts differs. I have also noted baselines for .925, .800, and .500 silver content.

On-Testing-World-Coins-For-Silver-Content

Results for individual silver coins. (all were clean, undamaged and relatively free of tarnish)
1. Australia 1916 Shilling, SG test approx. .800 silver / .200 copper
2. Australia 1924 Shilling (this tested slightly higher than sterling .925)
3. Australia 1959 Shilling, SG tested below .300 silver / .700 copper
4. Australia 1921 Sixpence, SG tested close to .750 silver / .250 copper
5. Australia 1934 Sixpence, SG tested same as .925
6. Australia 1942 Sixpence, SG test approx. .600 silver / .400 copper
7. Australia 1954 Sixpence, SG test approx. .350 silver / .650 copper
8. India 1913 1 Rupee, SG tested close to .835 silver / .165 copper
9. US Kennedy 50c 1964, SG tested approx. .800 silver / .200 copper
10. Switzerland ½ Frank. Two different coins, exact same SG results as .500 silver / .500 copper (it should be .835)
11. Canada 1947 25c, SG tests closest to .750 silver / .250 copper
12. Canada 1913 10c, SG test approx. .700 silver / .300 copper
13. Newfoundland 1943 10c, Spec is .925, coin SG is closest to .500 silver / .500 copper

Here are a few specific gravity values calculated for silver content with the remainder copper:

.999 = 10.49
.925 = 10.36
.900 = 10.31
.835 = 10.23
.800 = 10.17
.750 = 10.08
.600 = 9.84
.500 = 9.68
.400 = 9.53
.300 = 9.38
.200 = 9.23

Please let me know if you spot any mistakes.
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rggoodie's Avatar
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 Posted 12/29/2008  08:11 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add rggoodie to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Great useful information
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 Posted 12/29/2008  7:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SeriousCERES to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
That's a considerable, and pretty telling disparity! I guess it should not be a huge surprise (though I'd expect the Swiss to toe the line a bit better). So: evidence of some kind of variability in the minting process or evidence of mints "cheating"?
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KurtS's Avatar
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5318 Posts
 Posted 12/29/2008  7:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KurtS to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I also wonder if this might have something to do with mint's suppliers of ingots or even planchets. Would the mint assay every shipment?
If the supplier knew they didn't, some might try to get away with debased silver from time to time. This is interesting enough to keep on testing.
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 Posted 12/30/2008  10:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SeriousCERES to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Absolutely, it is. Keep us apprised of what you find, this is a really interesting subject. There certainly are enough coins sold at their presumed BV to merit inquiry into the degree of variation in actual bullion content of many of these popular series.
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KurtS's Avatar
United States
5318 Posts
 Posted 01/10/2009  02:15 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KurtS to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Here are a few more SG results, this time with mostly US coins:
The results are the average of 3 separate tests. Again, I was very skeptical of the results, so I compared against a "control group" of 4 bronze and CuNi coins between each silver test. For the control group, the variance between test and mint specs was 0.2-1.8% (all on the low end, an average of 3 tests for each coin).

Now the results with silver coins:

1954 Franklin 50c = 10.17, SG test .800 silver / .200 copper
1932 25c = 10.0, SG test approx. .750 silver / .250 copper
1853 25c = 10.11, SG test approx. .775 silver / .225 copper
1964 50c = 10.22, SG test approx. .835 silver / .165 copper (different coin than first test)
1966 Mexico Peso = 9.06, SG test approx. .100 silver / .900 copper --this is as expected!

Needless to say, I am rather surprised by the results for the silver coins.
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Bronxman95's Avatar
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178 Posts
 Posted 01/13/2009  1:53 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Bronxman95 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Try a silver eagle or something with a believed .999 silver purity?
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KurtS's Avatar
United States
5318 Posts
 Posted 01/14/2009  12:06 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add KurtS to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Update: I have done a new SG test on silver bullion with interesting results!
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