Pocket Change

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Kentucky, May 5, 2013.

  1. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Just thinking, when I first started collecting, you could buy a fountain Coke for a dime, pay with a dollar (possibly a silver
    certificate) and get the following:

    DSCN0369.jpg
     
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  3. cladking

    cladking Coin Collector

    Of course those coins were only twenty or twenty five years old at the time.

    Now we regularly get 50 and 75 year old coins in change.
     
  4. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    Where do you shop?
     
  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Let's see, 50 I can believe since that would be 1963, no silver but some nickels and pennies. However 75 would put us back to 1938 - I haven't found anything like that for awhile.
     
  6. mikenoodle

    mikenoodle The Village Idiot Supporter

    then you don't look at your nickels
     
  7. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    I look at all the change I get in change, but I don't roll hunt. I still think you don't find that many nickels in the 50's and earlier. I don't, but that might come from living in CA. I put quarters I found in change away for years, especially the state quarters, with the intent of making a state set from circulation just for the heck of it. Going through them recently, I still am missing many of them - particularly P mint ones.

    Interesting things for kids to collect from change nowadays - State quarters, National Parks quarters, Jefferson nickels series, none of which are valuable, but collecting them can be fun. Remember having fun collecting and not buying?
     
  8. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    In a box search of nickels I turn up an average of 2-3 1939 dated coins. I find about 1 1938 for every 10-12 1939 dated coins. They are out there.
     
  9. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    So, a box of nickels is $100, or 2000 coins and you find 2-3 1939's...hmmm 0.15%, and after you have found 10 of these you find a 1938 for an overall 0.015%. That means to find one in my pocket change I have to go through almost 7000 nickels. Maybe I should re-consider metal detecting.
     
  10. coingeek12

    coingeek12 Well-Known Member

    I found a 17s nickel while looking through pocket change.
     
  11. Marsden

    Marsden Well-Known Member

    What is a fountain Coke and why is it called that?
    Is a fountain involved?
     
  12. enochian

    enochian silver eater

    is this a real question?

    if so a "fountain" coke is what you get at gas stations or fastfood you take a cup push the button syrup and carbonated water come out together to make pop which tastes a lot better then bottled
     
  13. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    Only if the mixture is calibrated properly. A little bit off and you have a cup of garbage.
     
  14. Marsden

    Marsden Well-Known Member

    I didn't know but I figured it was something like this.
    Still not sure why the word 'fountain' is used but I guess I can look it up ;)

    I don't drink carbonated beverages of any kind so I'm no expert at this :)
     
  15. Marsden

    Marsden Well-Known Member

    Oh nvm I forgot tonic water is carbonated :)
     
  16. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

  17. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    I hunt for silver war nickels, Buffalos, very occasional Liberties etc. It is a cheap and relatively harmless form of gambling, and even my 8 year old is in on it now. The only date and MM after 1934 I haven't found is the '50-D.
     
  18. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    I was a kid in the mid-60s, and it was fun to collect from change. I had Whitman books of Buffalo nickels, Mercury dimes, various silver quarters. I tried roll hunting recently, but discovered I didn't have the patience for it.
     
  19. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    Trusting to my memory, which is never a safe bet, the biggest drug store in my hometown of 2000 people was the Fountain Korner. You could buy a small Coke which was dispensed from the soda fountain which mixed syrup and carbonated water in a set fashion (and if it wasn't set right, they would hear about it quickly). The small Coke was in a conical waxed paper cup that was placed in a metal holder. This cost 6 cents. If you wanted it in a larger waxed paper cup that had a flat bottom that cost 10 cents. Then you could go over and peruse the comic books that were there for 10 cents...Oh look a new magazine called Mad...wonder what it is...
     
  20. Blaubart

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  21. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

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