How much are these coins worth?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by rmani, Mar 20, 2005.

  1. rmani

    rmani New Member

    Hi everyone. I came across this forum and registered because I found some old dimes in my coin jar. They are all U.S. Dimes, the earliest of which is from 1912, 1916, 1917, 1923, and then there are a bunch from the '30s and '40s.

    Are these worth anything? :confused:


    Thanks guys. :)
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    Welcome to the forum mani. Your first assignment as a new member is to read this thread so you will understand why you haven't given us enough information. :D
    Bear in mind that every silver coin has three distinct values, and a coin is "worth" whichever is the highest at any specific time.

    • The face value of each of your coins is 10¢.
    • Since they are all either Barber or Mercury types, they contain .07234 oz. of pure silver, so their bullion value is approximately 53¢ each.
    • The numismatic value of each of your coins, based on the factors in the posting I referred you to, could be as little as the bullion value, or as much as several hundred dollars or more.
     
  4. rmani

    rmani New Member

    hey Roy thanks for the welcome.

    I checked out the link you posted so here is as much info as I know:

    Coin: U.S. Dime minted in 1912. I'm not sure of the metal but it's silver like any modern dime.

    I have no idea where the coin was minted there are no letters or numbers on the coin.

    I looked on ebay and here's link to someone else with the exact same dime.


    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=11959&item=3961210019&rd=1

    As for the condition it's in OK condition. The face is really worn you can't see any details except for the silhouette of the lady's head on the front.

    I guess from the ebay add it's not worth much?
     
  5. Metalman

    Metalman New Member

    Hi rmani

    Check the back of the 1916 dime on the bottom left for a very small mint mark or no mint mark,,is there anything there?

    Rick
     
  6. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    Actually, my friend, modern dimes minted after 1964 are not silver (except for a relatively small number of proofs). They are made from the same copper-nickle sandwiches as quarters, halfs, and the last few years of Ike dollars.
    That coin was designed by Charles Barber, and is referred to as a "Barber", not "Barbara" as the seller seems to think.[​IMG]
    That makes it G-4 at best, so it's only worth 53¢.

    So - 1 down, how many to go? :D
     
  7. Bluegill

    Bluegill Senior Member

    Hey, don't forget a coin's sentimental value. That's just about the only real value any of my coins have!!! ;)
     
  8. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    True, but a coin can be sold for its face, bullion or numismatic value - it can never be sold for its sentimental value. :)
     
  9. lawdogct

    lawdogct Coin Collector


    Unless it belonged to someone famous ;) (confirmed or otherwise) but that's a whole different Ball O' Wax
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page