Why is only the red book spiral?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Vertigo, Oct 9, 2022.

  1. Vertigo

    Vertigo Did someone say bust?

    Why oh why?
     
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  3. Joel Turner

    Joel Turner Active Member Supporter

    Probably so the pages can lay flat
     
    CoinCorgi likes this.
  4. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    What other book would you like to also be in spiral form? o_O :bookworm:
     
    AdamL likes this.
  5. CoinCorgi

    CoinCorgi Tell your dog I said hi!

  6. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    I don’t care for spiral bound books, but maybe that’s just me. The “pages laying flat” argument might be the reason. When I was a dealer, I had a spiral bound book for the business and a regular one for my library. I have a complete year set of Red Books.
     
  7. Vertigo

    Vertigo Did someone say bust?

    I'd like the blue book to be spiral as well...
     
  8. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    I'm assuming the Red Book is more popular and used than the Blue Book. It would be costly to make the Blue Book spiral.
     
  9. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I think they made the Blue in spiral for some years. I like the Red in spiral just because it will stay open to the page I need. Truth is I can do without the spiral.
     
  10. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I always buy the spiral version.
    Trying to work at my computer with a hardbound version would be VERY annoying.
     
  11. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    There was a Blue Book in spiral, and they stopped making it.
     
  12. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Why is only the red book spiral?

    It isn't the only one, there are many others. I own 7 different standard reference books that have spiral binding. The ANA grading guide, Cherry Pickers guide, NGC grading guide, US Gold Counterfeit detection guide to name a few. And there are more beyond those I own.

    Spiral binding is typically used because it is the least expensive binding method so it allows the publisher to offer cheaper copies of the same book.
     
  13. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    I have been a collector for over 60 years, and I have never seen the reasons why anyone would be drawn to the Blue Book. The price listings are limited, unless it's changed in recent years, and there is for more information in the Red Book. Like the Red Book, the price listings are all dated the minute it's published. I don't see the attraction.
     
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  14. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    don't get the spiral one .
    upload_2022-10-10_15-58-59.png

    then you can have a harder problem of reading the stuff near the inner edge
     
  15. Publius2

    Publius2 Well-Known Member

    I have no idea why the Red Book is spiral-bound but the Blue Book generally is not. My speculations mirror those already offered.

    I will say that for a book that is used all the time, such as the Red Book, a hardbound book will suffer in its bindings whereas a spiral-bound book will not.

    Additionally, a spiral-bound book can be folded back on itself so that it only occupies half the space of a similarly-sized hard-bound book. That can be convenient in many instances.
     
    CoinCorgi likes this.
  16. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I ditto these observations.
     
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