1966 90 percent silver no joke look

Discussion in 'Error Coins' started by Shortsell, Oct 26, 2011.

  1. Shortsell

    Shortsell New Member

    I found this in a old roll please tell me what it would be worth I can't find them any where to see what it's worth the reed is perfect no 40 percent silver clad just pure silver reed evener jeweler said was silver not the silver clad from 65 to 71
    I have pics I'm tryin to post them
    Any help would be great.
    Thank you
     
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  3. Shortsell

    Shortsell New Member

    I'm sorry it's a 1966 Kennedy half dollar with pure silver reed or 90 percent silver
     
  4. rickyh211

    rickyh211 Member

    It's worth $5 its 40% silver maybe less pic?
     
  5. dsmith23

    dsmith23 Gotta get 'em all

    Whats the coin weigh?

    Edit:

    From Wiki:

    40% silver clad: 11.50 g
    90% silver: 12.50 g
     
  6. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    What's the weight?


    And welcome to the forum dear fellow......:)
     
  7. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    New playing field.....

    For some danged reason I was assuming the piece in question was a quarter. :)
     
  8. dsmith23

    dsmith23 Gotta get 'em all

    Oh yeah, and :welcome:
     
  9. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Perfect question, as this is the first thing to check. The mint or their suppliers weren't the greatest at getting these things, (the clad), just right, and I have seen coins from this timeframe look silver on the edges. The weight will always sort the answer out unless the coin has been plated.

    Chris

    P.S. Welcome to CT Shortsell. Its not we do not want to believe you sir, its just once a month someone comes here claiming to have a pure silver dime/quarter/half from 1965-1970. Most of the time its just imperfectly prepared metal.
     
  10. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Have things slowed down that much? Not that long ago we were getting posters who claimed they had found a 90% silver 1965 dime, quarter or half at least once or twice a week (or so it seemed anyway).
     
  11. Merc Crazy

    Merc Crazy Bumbling numismatic fool

    I've got plenty of 40%ers that look like 90%ers... until you check the date or drop them on a table.
     
  12. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    There's a joke in there somewhere. It's there......it lives......it's real.......

    Ring test. Operator.......

    Sorry. Gettin' past my bed time......
     
  13. Merc Crazy

    Merc Crazy Bumbling numismatic fool

    My wife thought my 40%er was actually a 90%er. About three minutes later, she was pretty disappointed.

    Eh?
     
  14. Twinturbo

    Twinturbo New Member

    if its a 66 half then its 40%
    if its a 66 quarter then someone had a fun chemical experiment...
     
  15. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Remember that the 1966 half was a inner core of 21% silver/79% copper covered by a layer of 80% silver/20% copper, so the edge would look like silver to most. Many think it is silver over a copper core, which would show copper color on edge.

    Jim
     
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  16. eddiespin

    eddiespin Fast Eddie

    Forget about the pictures for now and take it back to the jeweler and get a weight on it carried out to two decimal places, that's what we need to see.
     
  17. Dave Lemon

    Dave Lemon New Member

    I also have a silver 1966 quarter. It has that old silver sheen, and when I drop it, it rings... unlike the 40% copper one.
     
  18. beef1020

    beef1020 Junior Member

    Head up, start a new post, don't bring one back from the dead.
     
  19. Dave Lemon

    Dave Lemon New Member

    I believe the 1966 quarter needs more investigating. I have heard of two others..
     
  20. Paul M.

    Paul M. Well-Known Member

    I really hate to say this, but this error is theoretically possible. It's known to occur on a 1965 quarter, and, amazingly, a 1968-d dime.
     
  21. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    The thread did start several years ago and some members will ignore it as a dead thread, so after you weight it as the weight of a 90% ( 6.25 gram +/-.097 grams) differs significantly from a clad. Also a close up photo of the date , as to an expert engraver, it is not an impossible task to change a 56 silver into a 66 'silver' coin. Those 2 things could allow us to give a better answer. Then consider starting a new thread with those as the lead off post. Jim
     
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