NASA Coins in 2009

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by taurus876, Jun 24, 2008.

  1. taurus876

    taurus876 Senior Member

    http://www.coinnews.net/2008/06/22/nasa-silver-and-gold-coin-legislation-4199/

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    What a joke!!!!

    1) The 50th ann. of NASA should be in 2008 but the coins are coming out in 2009.

    2) 9 Silver coins, one for each planet. Wait there are only eight planets. Pluto was demoted two years ago. Plus 1 Gold coin ($50) for the Sun.

    3) These coins would not be "counted against" the annual 2 commemorative coin program minting limit. Then why have a limit if you do not intend to stand by the limit.

    4) The $50 gold coin would only be sold as part of the compete set, containing the nine $1 silver commemorative coins.

    The US mint is trying to copy the US Postal Service and the Canadain mint. What a shame.
     
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  3. Ardatirion

    Ardatirion Où est mon poisson

    American space exploration is, in my opinion, an IDEAL candidate for a commemorative coin!

    But:
    1 - The design is atrocious. There's no artistic engraving at all, its probably just laser-etched onto the dies from a photo.
    2 - The planets aren't the United States' to commemorate - if we want to mint coins for things that have nothing to do with our country, we might as well call ourselves the Isle of Man!
    3 - ONE silver dollar is enough. Or, at worst, two. And that only if you have two great designs you can't choose from.

    The US Mint will be ruining a great idea if they mint these coins.
     
  4. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    If you want affordable and meaningful 50th Anniversary Space commemoratives, think Russia or Ukraine which have commemoratives for the anniversary, which actually were issued during the 50th anniversary year(how novel of those ex Soviet aka communard types anyway:)) At least they have base metal coins, which are quite affordable. I like the Sergey Korolyev commems myself.

    I am all in favour of NASA, but this coin programme is a joke, right?
     
  5. cesariojpn

    cesariojpn Coin Hoarder

    I'm more miffed at the fact that more of my tax money is being used to fund two useless programs.
     
  6. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    I think you should be more than miffed about programmes that are much more expensive than NASA, and a lot less meaningful.:)
     
  7. Ardatirion

    Ardatirion Où est mon poisson


    Amen. But let's stop, before it get political. And locked.
     
  8. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts

    coins on the horizon as the sun sets
     
  9. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    I think space exploration is a wonderful thing that should be put on a commemorative coin...but lets commemorate the exploration of it. It seems like this set is going to commemorate the existence of planets and the sun, not mankind's exploration of it. If I was going to do a set like this, commemorate our exploring of space...a coin with man standing on the moon, the Voyager probe flying past Saturn, the Pathfinder sitting on Mars...things of that nature. Whats the point of commemorating the planets.

    Maybe thats just me (I'm a huge space buff...its sort of my biggest interest).
     
  10. Magman

    Magman U.S. Money Collector

    Richie, did you read the article?
    It does commemorate the exploration... it gives examples of a few of them, in blue.
     
  11. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    I skimmed through it...but I didn't read it as throughly as I thought I did. I admit, I missed part of that. But, it still seems to me to be focusing on "space" itself as the main thing. I could easily think of 10 things that should be the "primary" theme of the coin. I feel that the planets being on the obverse and the exploration theme being on the reverse sort of puts the focus on the planet and not the exploration...again, maybe I'm wrong. I'll have to see when they come out.

    Plus, as has been NASA was founded in 1958 meaning that the 50th anniversary is 2008, not 2009. If they were commemorating manned exploration, they could use 1959 because that was the year of the first astronaut selection.

    Again, I could be missing the point completely.
     
  12. taurus876

    taurus876 Senior Member


    The US mint wants your money.

    I suspect this set will cost $1500

    9 silver comm @ $45 each + 1 Gold oz @ $1100
     
  13. gxseries

    gxseries Coin Collector

    I'll rather have a penguin:

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    Yes, that's Gagarin if you didn't know. Just nicknamed penguin because of how the statue looks like.
     
  14. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    I get that, but my point is...they could find 10 events worthy of being on the coin's obverse to celebrate America's exploration of space. The set would still cost the same and would then really commemorate America's exploration rather than simply showing the planets.

    Here's an example of what specific events they could do...and what could be on the coin, just quickly put together (including some images I just pulled up).

    9 Silver Commemoratives
    1. 1958 - Explorer 1 "America's First Satellite" (launched before NASA formed) - image of satellite
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    2. 1961 - Freedom 7 "America's First Manned Spaceflight" - image of Redstone rocket launch
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    3. 1965 - Gemini EVA "Working Towards the Moon, First Spacewalk" - image of spacewalking astronaut
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    4. 1975 - Apollo-Soyuz Test Project "Peace in Space" - image of American & Soviet capsules docked
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    5. 1977-Present - Voyager Probes "The Grand Tour" - Probe image
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    6. 1981 - Space Shuttle "Dawn of a New Era" - image of shuttle launch
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    7. 1990-Present - Hubble Telescope "A Glimpse of the Past" - image of telescope
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    8. 1998-Present - International Space Station "Working Together for the Future" - station image
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    9. 2004-Present - Spirit and Opportunity "Exploring Mars" - image of rovers
    [​IMG]


    $50 Gold Commemorative
    1969 - Apollo Moon Landing "We've Landed on the Moon" - image of astronaut saluting the flag on moon
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    IMHO, these would be better choices for the obverse of the coins...it better defines the highlights of our exploration. There are other highlights that could be mentioned (orbiting the moon with moon rise photo, or Skylab)...but with 10 coins...this is what I would do.

    Maybe I'm taking this too serious. But, the cost to the consumer would be the same and IMHO...it would be a better set.
     
  15. bama guy

    bama guy Coin Hoarder

    I am still upset about Pluto being demoted.
     
  16. spock1k

    spock1k King of Hearts

    if we are lucky might even cost us 2 grand
     
  17. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    NASA deserved better commemoratives. When you consider the Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, Shuttle and various unmanned programs and achievements, there are a lot of great themes and visual effects that could have made this one of the greatest commemorative series to collect. But it looks like Congress and the Mint will drop the ball -- again.
     
  18. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    Pretty much exactly what I was trying to say. I agree 100%.
     
  19. cesariojpn

    cesariojpn Coin Hoarder

    But I depend on my Sugar Subsidy!!
     
  20. 900fine

    900fine doggone it people like me

    Pluto could be on a half cent ! :cool:
     
  21. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    From my understanding of the reading (and I didn't go back and double check it...so I could be wrong), there won't be a "Pluto" coin but a coin representing the dwarf planets. So, that would include Ceres, Pluto, and Eris.

    Although Pluto is still a planet in my heart...this isn't the first time a planet in our solar system has been demoted. Ceres was discovered in the early 19th century and was considered a planet for years until being demoted to an asteroid. Its now classified as a dwarf planet.

    Ceres is located in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter and is by far the largest body in the belt. Eris is out beyond Pluto, its also bigger than both Ceres and Pluto.
     
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