1962 and 1963 Ben Franklin Half Dollar

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Bluntflame, May 5, 2019.

  1. Bluntflame

    Bluntflame Well-Known Member

    1557089977488123643562.jpg 15570901245011455865340.jpg 1557090302110123643562.jpg 15570903991661455865340.jpg I picked up these 2 half dollars at a local flea market for 6.50$ a piece. Could I get some help grading and valuing them?
     
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  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Melt value x .36169 x 2 !
     
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  4. furryfrog02

    furryfrog02 Well-Known Member

    $5.40 a piece melt value. Not really any value beyond that IMO.
     
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  5. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    Welcome to CT. One of my favorite series. Getting one of these as a kid set my coin fires burning...... You got a fair deal for the two halves.they are average circulated. Maybe VF-XF. And most Franklin halves with exception of a few dates and very high grade examples trade at at about melt. Currently melt is around ten times face value.
     
  6. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Spot value of silver x 2 x .3617
     
  7. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    I'm a Virgo! I prefer to use the value cited in the Red Book - .36169

    Chris
     
  8. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Right but the equation uses silver spot to come up with melt value. As in melt value= spot value of silver x 0.36169
     
  9. Cochisz

    Cochisz Chief coin collector

  10. Ana Silverbell

    Ana Silverbell Well-Known Member

    You did not overpay for these halves. Try buying a Franklin half, in the same condition as the ones you bought, for $6.50 on eBay or at your local coin dealer. You're probably going to pay about $8 or more.

    Don't worry about current value. It's not as though you have a lot of $ tied up in them. Hold onto them and sell when silver is higher. You won't get rich but you'll make a few dollars. Or just keep them because they are cool.
     
  11. LA_Geezer

    LA_Geezer Well-Known Member

    True, but there is an eBay dealer from the Harpers Ferry WV area (not exactly sure where, but in that part of WV) that has some very fine Franklin specimens, most of them verging on BU. I paid between $6.50 and $14 for the ones I bought from him. I sure wish he had had some Walkers at his prices, but he didn't have a single one at the time.
     
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  12. capthank

    capthank Well-Known Member

    Both look to be the type two
     
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  13. Ima Dragon

    Ima Dragon Year of the Dragon

    They appear to be VF-XF and You got a good deal IMHO .
    I’m one to collect the series (not a set though) primarily because they have a Benjamin Franklin portrait and their 90% Silver too .
     
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  14. PlanoSteve

    PlanoSteve Well-Known Member

    I'd say those are nice pickups! Agree with @capthank, appear to be type 2 reverse.
     
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  15. Ana Silverbell

    Ana Silverbell Well-Known Member

    Was that a single coin price? If so, good for you. That is below what most people pay.
     
  16. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    You paid about a $1.50 over melt and that's all they're worth.
     
  17. Tim Sweet

    Tim Sweet Member

    Cointracker:
    Numismatic vs Intrinsic Value: This coin in poor condition is still worth $6.62 more than the intrinsic value from silver content of $5.38, this coin is thus more valuable to a collector than to a silver bug.

    1948-1963 Ben Franklin Half Dollar silver 0.3617 3 three = just over an oz of silver - 1.0851 (depending on wear) Silver is @ $15:04 today.
     
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  18. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Oh no. Are we bring back the 1/2 cent. Or are we starting to round off. I need to pay attention on current events. I did hear about the W quarters though
     
  19. Cheech9712

    Cheech9712 Every thing is a guess

    Help me. What does that equal to if i use your math. Sorry. I really need help to ffigure this out. I'm thinking any franklin is worh 5 bucks. Am i way off?
     
  20. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    …..and a coin dealer will cite his overhead plus the wear and tear on the sidewalk outside his business plus the time needed to take off for lunch plus any other thing he/she can think of that will make more money for the business.

    I'm not going to get into a 15-year argument about this like I had to do with the value of copper pennies. You do what the heck you want.

    Chris
     
  21. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Chris, buddy, not trying to be argumentative. You just had the wrong term in your equation. Just trying to clarify for any newbies. Melt value of a coin is the SPOT price of the metal content times the amount of pure metal in the coin; you wrote MELT Value x amount of pure metal in the coin (.36169 oz for Franklin half dollars).
     
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