1937 through 1964 silver quarters Q.

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by HumptyDumpty, Feb 16, 2010.

  1. HumptyDumpty

    HumptyDumpty Junior Member

    Hello,

    Lately I've been cruising the pawn shops looking for good deals on silver coins, I've only found one pawn shop that sells any type of coins in my area.

    I went into the pawn shop pen in hand, with a cheat sheet of current market values and a calculator.

    Today I picked up 5 quarters for $9.95; 1937, 1957, 1956, 1962, and a 1964. I looked at coinflation ($14.59 melt value) before buying them, so I figured why not.

    Although it appears I made $4.64 (-.95 cents tax) profit at current market rates, I wanted to know if this is good practice?

    Thanks,

    Chas.
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. bobbeth87

    bobbeth87 Coin Collector

    Sounds like sound strategy to me....so long as you are convinced they are authentic coins.
     
  4. HumptyDumpty

    HumptyDumpty Junior Member

    Ooop's, forgot to say I brought my pocket digital scale with me too. They weighed fine.

    Anyway other way of testing without marking them?
     
  5. You made a good deal and your method is solid. TC
     
  6. sunflower

    sunflower New Member

    great method

    Thanks for sharing your method.
     
  7. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    You're doing fine.
     
  8. HumptyDumpty

    HumptyDumpty Junior Member

    Brilliant, thanks. And Sunflower, no probs on sharing methods; I'm sure not everyone is in my part of S. Cali.
     
  9. SilverSurfer

    SilverSurfer Whack Job

    I say you did better than fine. You did fantastic. As was mentioned, make sure they are real. I use a tap method, where I place the coin on the tip of my finger and tap it with a regular quarter from today. It should make a nice ring sound. I suggest going back to the pawn shop and buying more before they realize that they are selling too cheaply.
     
  10. HumptyDumpty

    HumptyDumpty Junior Member

    Oh I would, but after walking in there with my calculator and doing them math, the other silver coins they have (halves & Quarters) are way above melt value. For example; they had 16 Franklins going for $140, when in melting value they were only worth $93.35. I'll be keeping checking out other stores they have nearer the city district :)
     
  11. Pocket Change

    Pocket Change Coin Collector

    There may be a reason why they're $140 - check the dates.

    If they're selling coins, I really don't think they're doing it blindly. I'm guessing someone screwed up on pricing the quarters. But maybe you stumbled on a group of idiots.

    I wonder how long they'll be open? Are they selling Wide-Screen TVs for $20?
     
  12. cerdsalicious

    cerdsalicious BigShot

    Pretty good.
    One of my favorites was buying junk silver mrogans from one store selling it to another store. lol
    God used to make a killing doing that back in hs. Those were the days.
     
  13. bhp3rd

    bhp3rd Die varieties, Gems

    Not a bad deal but you made no profit at all, yet.

    Not a bad deal but you made no profit at all, yet. Until you sell them that is. I would have been a little closer to $12.00 on the group.
     
  14. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    Some coins in antique shops are being sold by collectors trying to unload their duplicates for more than coin shops will give them. But others really don't know much about them. Many times they will price them at Redbook times 2. But sometimes they just mark them up over their cost and are happy to make the sale. It's a mixed bag.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page