1968 Canadian dime

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by Hiddendragon, Apr 30, 2011.

  1. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Apparently there are three types of dime for 1968 in Canada - 90 percent silver, 50 percent silver and non-silver. I have a few that I think are at least partial silver. How can I tell?
     
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  3. SWThirteen

    SWThirteen Needs a 24/7 Coin Shop

    http://www.coinflation.com/silver_coin_values.html

    Scroll down to the Canadian section. A 68 dime is 50% silver. Some are 0% silver. The weight would give it away. A 50% silver dime is 2.33 grams and a 99.9% nickel dime is 2.07 grams. The 80% silver dimes started in 1920 and ended part way through 1967 when they switched to 50% silver.
     
  4. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Is there any way other than weight? I don't own a scale.
     
  5. SWThirteen

    SWThirteen Needs a 24/7 Coin Shop

    I've read about a magnet test. The 50% silver will not stick to a magnet while those with no silver do stick to a magnet. I have never tested it, but you can try it. As for the 1967's, there is no way to tell the difference between the 80% and the 50%. Many people just call them 65% because of this. If you have the resources, you can test the 67's for density. The 80% will be slightly denser then the 50% because silver is denser than copper.

    I got this info from these links
    http://www.coinscan.com/technical/canasp.html
    http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.php?topic=369522.0
     
  6. jensenbay

    jensenbay Well-Known Member

    If a magnet sticks... no silver.
     
  7. Ripley

    Ripley Senior Member

    Hiddy, buy a gram scale. They cost around $10 on Ebay for a new one.
     
  8. Hiddendragon

    Hiddendragon World coin collector

    Well, the two coins in question don't stick to a magnet, so hopefully that means they are silver. Silver has a certain look to it, and that's why I thought these were to begin with.
     
  9. Tinpot

    Tinpot Well-Known Member

    is there no weight difference between the 50% silver and 80% silver coins?

    Thanks in advance whether you know or not :D
     
  10. tarantella

    tarantella New Member

    According to the links above, both the .800 and .500 dimes weight 2.33 grams. Maybe there's a miniscule difference, but I guess a gram scale wouldn't pick it up. I'm interested too, because I have a couple of 1967 and 1968 Canadian dimes.
     
  11. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    It is an interesting contrast how the RCM can change the metals in coins so seemlessly, the cent, the five cent and the larger denomination coins changed pretty frequently. Lately with the cent they were going back and forth betwixt the copper rolled steel and the copper plated zinc. With the five cent coins they do the same, at least until 2006 they were minting in two metals.

    The vending machine lobby and the zinc lobby must not be very powerful in the parliament like they are in the US Congress.
     
  12. CanadianKidEh

    CanadianKidEh New Member

    There are three versions, silver, non silver from Ottawa and non silver from Philadelphia.
     
  13. Patmcf

    Patmcf New Member

    The sheen is also different. Nickel is a little darker but very bright & reflective. Silver is lighter in color & not as reflective unless in mint state.
     
  14. stldanceartist

    stldanceartist Minister of Silly Walks

    FYI, the local coin shop has a PM tester that can discern the difference. Supposedly costs about a grand, though...
     
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