Are these coins Silver?

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by Capt. Spaulding, Jun 2, 2012.

  1. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. jlblonde

    jlblonde Señor Member

    Cool. Maybe I should try and make one.

    I built an Ion Gun that shuts down the electrical system of cars. I used it once on my neighbors annoying boom box car stereo. I doesn't work anymore though. I fried it trying to increase the intensity.
     
  4. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

    And basically the gun will shoot radiation and come back telling you the exact metals and alloys with percentages and everything. It has saved that coin shop on many occasions. Their tray of fakes has grown exponentially since then and they have avoided some very tempting bad transactions with that thing.

    Very wise investment if you are an owner of a coin shop, especially with counterfeiting on the rise and getting better. It'll pay for itself.
     
  5. jensenbay

    jensenbay Well-Known Member

    What LCS? I'm is WA as well. PM if you don't want to say in the thread.
     
  6. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    Though I've not sold any 1967 Canadian personally, I've heard that many dealers just buy and sell it all as if it were 65% silver (split the difference).

    And to the OP, you can tell which 1968 coins are silver with a magnet. The silver ones aren't magnetic.
     
  7. Capt. Spaulding

    Capt. Spaulding New Member

    Thank you. :thumb:
     
  8. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    You look it up online or in the world coin catalog; that is how you tell.
     
  9. jlblonde

    jlblonde Señor Member

    That is how you tell what? They're both the same. There are no distinguishing features, not even the weight is different just the content of silver. How does the catalogue tell which is different? It doesn't. That is what we've been talking about. You know, aiming a highly dangerous and extremely expensive nuclear accelerator at the coin to determine whether it is 80% or 50%.
     
  10. lincolncent

    lincolncent Future Storm Chaser Guy

    Woah didn't know that. I've found a couple of these circulating but didn't realize they were silver.
     
  11. Cazkaboom

    Cazkaboom One for all, all for me.

    Sure thing. It is called Odyssey Coins and Collectibles. It is in Everett on Evergreen way.
     
  12. domdino

    domdino Junior Member

    I need to be educated on older Canadian coins. When was the last year George the 5th appeared on coinage? Aren't Canadian coins (10, 25, 50 and 1.00) prior to 1920 Sterling Silver? I just purchased three 25 cent pieces as described above, but they are so badly worn / damaged the dates can't be read. Not even worth scanning. Anyone with advice?
     
  13. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

  14. jlblonde

    jlblonde Señor Member

    [h=2]I did not know this about Canadian quarters. Interesting...

    Other notable dates[/h][​IMG]
    • The 1906 Small Crown is valued in the thousands of dollars even for very poor conditions.
    • 1936 marked two valuable variations, the Bar and the Dot, both trend for over $1000 in uncirculated condition.
    • The 1951 Low Relief was predominantly only made available in proof-like sets and have a mintage of around 500.
    • The 1973 Large Bust is among the most desired Canadian Quarter. They sell for around $300 in Proof Like or Specimen condition, and can sell in the thousands for high end circulation strikes.
    • The 1991 quarter had a low mintage, of 459,000
    • The 1992 New Brunswick quarter has several rotated die versions, with the 180 degree rotation selling for between $100 and $200 in uncirculated condition.
    • 1999 featured mule versions of the September and November quarters. These coins do not have the 25 CENTS mark on them, making them, ironically, legal tender without face value. Either usually sells for over $10 depending on the condition of the coin. The Royal Canadian Mint estimates a combined mintage of 10,000 to 50,000 of the September and November mules.
    • The 2000 Millennium Map Mule. Highly sought after by collectors, this is a modern rarity with about 100 known examples, as referenced in population reports of coin certification services (ICCS, CCCS, PCGS, NGC).
    • 2000P Caribou: two examples are known to exist. They fetch $40,000 or more (ICCS has graded both in MS-64: ICCS 2010 Population report). Both are in private collections.
    • 2000P Creativity: two are known to exist. They fetch $15,000 to $20,000 (ICCS has graded one in MS-62 and the other in MS-66: ICCS 2010 Population report).
    • 2000P Community: five are known to exist. They fetch $12,000 to $15,000 (ICCS has graded one in MS-60, two in MS-62, and two in MS-63: ICCS 2010 Population report).
    [h=2][edit][/h]
     
  15. Capt. Spaulding

    Capt. Spaulding New Member

    Alright I finally got my hands on a magnet and turns out both of the 1968 Canadian Dimes are not silver.
     
  16. jlblonde

    jlblonde Señor Member

    So I take it that they both stuck to the magnet then. Wait, they're are made of nickel aren't they? What happened when you placed a magnet to them?

    In any case, I was wrong. So horribly wrong. The shame! :confused:

    Anyways, it seems that you have two different types of 1968 10 cents coins made of not-so-precious metal.

    Ok, let's have another go at it.

    Canadian 10 cent coin on the right: KM#72a w/Ottawa reeding on the edge and a more refine bust.

    Canadian 10 cent coin on the left: KM#73 w/Philadelphia reeding on the edge and a goofier bust.

    I believe these to be correct now. It's kinda hard when I can't view them in hand.
     
  17. Capt. Spaulding

    Capt. Spaulding New Member

    Yes both the 68's stuck.
     
  18. domdino

    domdino Junior Member

    Thanks Lon! But their composition is still a mystery. I showed them to Firesideguy today at work, but he had no definite answers. Even if only 80% Ag I feel they were a fair buy. ($5 each).
     
  19. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    Post a pic of the coins. Maybe somebody can help.
    And also, $5 isn't terrible for 80%ers. Melt right now is $4.22 per coin.
     
  20. jensenbay

    jensenbay Well-Known Member

    I believe the OP was about dimes. Melt today is $1.68 for 80% and $1.04 for 50%.
     
  21. Lon Chaney

    Lon Chaney Well-Known Member

    I was referring to domdino's quarters he was asking about.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page