The only spare that I have for trade is a 1889 PCGS PR-65 CAM. I will take 3,500 of them for my nickel I will take 275,000 of the 1957 or 200,000 of the 1911 for my nickel. I will do a direct trade if it is a certified tin bicentennial quarter. Edited to remove the D
What do you use as a price guide? There are a couple I can recommend. One is the auction archives at Heritage auctions. You can look up almost any coin and get auction results from 10+ years. Also, on their auction listings, they have 8 or 9 different pricing sources listed. So you can go find your coin in one of their current auction lists and scroll down the page to the price guides. I also use the NGC price guide. I use this as more of a guide than gospel. NGC pays Numismedia for the pricing information. It's impossible to give you values of the coins you have listed because we don't know the condition. I recommend buying a book called "The Official American Numismatic Association Grading Standards for US Coins". It's published by Whitman. I have the 7th edition. It's a great reference piece to help you understand how to grade. This will help you judge your coins. The price guides will help you with their value.
Cheapskate; you should ask for 24K. Everybody knows that... (I'm obviously joking with you Lee - I thought you would get it, but I want to be sure.)
If you can make a gem DCAM 1889 nickel (regular issue), I think I can purchase $2,750FV 1957 circulated wheat cents, or $3,500 in Sacagaweas you quoted.
Matty 440 Please don't take this as criticism, but as help to communicate here. I assume that English is your native language. However, your syntax in your questions and statements make it a little difficult to understand exactly what you mean. When you post a question or statement, please take a moment to re-read it and make sure it is fully understandable before hitting the Post Reply button. As far as the value for all the coins you have asked about, bookmark this page http://www.pcgs.com/photograde/ to grade the coins you have, and this site http://www.pcgs.com/prices/?gclid=C...wdq0Bn2TbM6FG-tQZbN8GCln2EhjG6751mRoCUoPw_wcB to find the approximate dealer's price for just about any coin you'll ever come across. We'd love to help you with detail questions, but many answers are available on line.