Value help (Argentina 1917 5 centavos)

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by kden, Feb 11, 2020.

  1. kden

    kden Active Member

    I know only 1,000,000 were minted and it’s pretty rare I think? I’m still pretty new and don’t know how to read the online coin value charts so if some one could help me figure out the value and maybe even teach me how to read this chart that would be great. :)
     

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  3. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    A248EBAF-A562-4E3F-9899-64A11A71A232.jpg


    I can tell you when I get back home in the morning.
     
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  4. kden

    kden Active Member

  5. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    Your list states 1,009,000
     
  6. Hookman

    Hookman Well-Known Member

    Hi, Welcome to Coin Talk !!

    First off, you have to understand that the chart you're looking at really only pertains to Numista members, that's why on the far right it says "Frequency". That "frequency", as I understand it, is roughly how many Numista members have the coin.
    You'll notice that for the year 1917, no value is shown at all. Does that mean that the coin of that year has no value? Of course not. I believe what that "no value" means is that no Numista member has reported a value or what they either bought or sold that coin of that year for.

    So as you can start to see, Numista is most valuable to Numista members. However, there is still a lot of valuable info to be gained on Numista pages.
    For example, all of the actual coin data such as weight, size, silver content, etc. is very pertinent to your coin. The actual intrinsic silver value (melt) shown is accurate and updated constantly.
    Numista is most helpful in IDENTIFYING coins.
    You can adjust your search parameters, by DESCRIPTION, until it starts showing you coins like what you're looking for.
    However, my go-to site for quick reference in both identifying and valuation is NGC.
    Use world for world coins. That link is NGC's World Coin lookup. You kinda have to have at least some idea of what you've got in order to get the most out of it, but if you enter the country, the year, and the denomination, in that order, it will give you everything else including an easy to understand valuation guide. Just remember that no valuation guide is so up-to-date that it will be perfectly correct.

    So to recap :

    Use Numista if you're not sure what the coin is and you can only describe what's on it in order to find it and identify it.
    And use NGC if you know the country, year, and denomination.

    Both are good sources of info, so you need both. Just remember which one to use when, and how.

    Now for American coins, here's a very easy one to use. It's called CoinTrackers. I'll give you the link. Just go to the site, start reading about it, then start playing around with it, and you'll quickly figure out how to use it. It's got a lot of useful info on it.

    /


    Yeah, it looks funny, but it works.
     
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  7. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    @kden

    A price guide (of any kind) is pretty much useless unless you know how to grade the coins. ~ Chris
     
  8. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    It's probably worth somewhere around a dollar to the right buyer, but in my experience coins from Argentina don't sell very quickly.
     
  9. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    NGC lists it at $5 in F.
    I have it graded slightly lower than that (VG) and their prices run high.
    $2 coin. It's a low value circulated Argentinian coin. I like the coin, but there's not much you can do with it except save it and look at it once in a while. There are billions of cool old foreign coins, and the market is not strong. These can be pulled out of a dealers foreign coin bucket for .50 or .75 cents.
     
    Last edited: Feb 11, 2020
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  10. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    With a mintage of 1,009,000 it is not rare. Rare is like 1-50.
    KM#34 1917 5 centavos. My 2019 catalog values them at...

    F-$5.00 VF-$10.00 XF-$25.00

    Not sure what your coins grade is ??? I would guess a Fine. Being made of Copper-Nickel. I am guessing the value would be in the $2-3 range.
     
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