Clad Cents Concept

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by nds76, Dec 6, 2004.

  1. nds76

    nds76 New Member

    I was watching the Coin Vault tonight and they had this awesome error coin with a Lincoln cent on a dime planchet and they were selling in a NGC holder in MS-67 and it was over $1700! This has got me to think...why not have clad cents? Copper gets too dark with age and green spots.

    David
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. cladking

    cladking Coin Collector

    We already have copper clad zinc cents. Cu/ ni clad copper would be prohibitively expensive. The cents probably already cost close to a cent and a half to produce and their days are numbered.
     
  4. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    $$$$$$$$

    Circulation coins are not produced to please collectors, and it would cost more to make clad cents than it does to make the current copper plated zinc coins - somewhere in the vicinity of 20-billion this century alone!
     
  5. nds76

    nds76 New Member

    I find that copper coins are amongst the dirtiest coins. Plus they tend to get really dark. And occasionally see the green spotting. Maybe the coinage should be the same colour too. Maybe in 2009 we'll see something different...

    David
     
  6. nds76

    nds76 New Member

    Isn't it expensive then too for other clad coinage? If copper is so much cheaper, why not have copper halves, quarters, dimes, etc..?

    David
     
  7. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    It's the value of the coin - 1 cent - that's all the Mint can sell it for to the Federal Reserve. That's the factor that makes it too expensive.

    The other coins still cost less to make than their face value.
     
  8. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    What GDJMSP said.

    Also, remember we haven't had any copper coins since the 1982 changeover from pure copper cents to copper-plated zinc cents. :(
     
  9. jody526

    jody526 New Member

    Actually, the last year of issue, of any significance, for a pure copper US coin, was 1857.

    The later issued cents of 1864, through the early issues of 1982, were a copper alloy, commonly known as bronze.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page