I have these two worn 1906-S Barber half dollars. The mint issue weight for these coins is 12.50 gm. United States Half Dollar 1906-S 11.85 gm (95% of issue) United States Half Dollar 1906-S 11.64 gm (93% of issue)
Somebody callin me ??? Hmmm - plumb forgot all about this. Probably Peter's fault - everything else is @Peter T Davis OK, the envelope please - and the answer is - (and yes Frank, I do remember) - the coin only lost 0.003 gm.
Heck, I wish I had a scale that gave reliably repeatable weights down to that level, especially over a period of years.
No great trick to it. Simply buy a scale that can be calibrated, and calibrate it with the same calibration weight, before each weighing. Oh, and you can also use more than 1 scale just to double check things.
And for what it's worth Jeff, I was just as surprised at the outcome as you apparently are. But the outcome was what it was.
The only accurate method would require weight checks before, and after wear. Cannot simply go by mint tolerances to compare.
I don't recall the exact before and after weights. But I most definitely recall how exactly how much weight it lost - 0.003 gm. And I remember it because it made such an profound impact on me. I fully expected the loss to be small because I've checked hundreds of coins in various states of wear, (maybe over a thousand), over the years to see how weight they lost from spec. But I was very surprised at just how small it was. And I also remember the loss amount exactly because I've posted the results for this specific coin at least a couple of times over the years. Weight loss due to wear is something I've studied for decades. And not just on modern coins, but on coins hundreds of years old. And the results are always the same in that the amount of weight lost is very, very, small. Much smaller than most folks seem to think. The vast majority of the time, once mint tolerance levels are taken into account, a coin has to get worn down VG grade before it loses enough weight to be out of spec.
I ask because AGEs weigh more than a troy ounce, since they are 22kt gold. The spec says they weigh 33.930 grams. If you don't know what the initial weight was, how do you know it only lost 0.003 grams?
Old threads are excellent for those of us who never saw them and the new people who have joined recently . Much to be learned from them. Sometimes it's good to just refresh our memories of certain details.
The coin in post #32 is not from normal circulation wear. If it was in acid, it can easily lose half it's weight.
"Three milligrams" is a lot easier to remember than "33.927g". Or are you saying that Doug is making this up?