How can you determine if bicentennial halves are silver or not?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by mitchelliii, Aug 25, 2010.

  1. mitchelliii

    mitchelliii Junior Member

    I separated about 200 and before sending them back want to be sure they don't contain silver.

    Any tips?

    Cheers,

    Scott
     
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  3. mitchelliii

    mitchelliii Junior Member

    May have answered my own question here - just the 1976-S's are 40% silver?
     
  4. davidlandon

    davidlandon Junior Member

    Correct, but there are also S's that aren't silver.
     
  5. conpewter

    conpewter Junior Member

    check the edge, the 40% halves won't show a copper clad layer (though it may be toned a little)
     
  6. swhuck

    swhuck Junior Member

    Any US clad coin, including the 40% ones, will show the clad layer. The color of the clad layer is different than on the coins with no silver, because the clad layer on the 40% silver coins is .791 copper/.209 silver, but it's there and very definitely visible.

    I think the key is to know the difference between what silver coins and copper-nickel coins look like. There's a subtle but real difference in color.
     
  7. Ltrain

    Ltrain New Member

    Sound is also different. Very different.
     
  8. holz

    holz holz

    Silver for 50c is 11.5 g. and clad is 11.34 g. the look and sound will be more then enough
     
  9. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    That is well within the normal variance. Try this;
     
  10. BR549

    BR549 Junior Member

    Put a 1 ply tissue paper over a bunch of the halves...any silver ones under there will pop out from the rest of the cupro-nickel ones.

    Try it, you'll be amazed.
     
  11. slamster17

    slamster17 Junior Member

    I'd agree on the visual differences as well as the difference in sound if you drop one, or flick one. It's pretty easy to just check the edges.
     
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