Change for... what?
It sounds like you're talking about one of the Whitman albums that has no plastic sliders, and only displays one face of the coin.
We see lots of new posters show up here asking "should I get this graded?" and then arguing with people who say "no". Those threads often end with...
I've been seeing Salt River and bat quarters quite a lot since last year, but I'm still awaiting my first W.
I've seen Roosevelt albums with labeled spots for "1965" and "1965-D". I may still have one somewhere. I don't remember whether it called out the...
Clear rivets, wide loop at the bottom of drapery. It's a 1917 (assuming it's a Type I reverse, otherwise I assume you wouldn't be asking)....
Does that Roosevelt album really have a copyright date of 1946, and a page for CLAD COINAGE STARTING 1965? :eek:
Benzene was highly effective, just a shame about the leukemia and anemia and immune suppression. I got a bottle of it during my chemistry phase. I...
Not a lot of people ready to put THAT amount of time and effort into a coin these days. Not when you can "reach" millions with a post to...
No, no, not dip (EZest) for PVC damage, and generally not for circulated silver like this, period. Silver dips remove tarnish, but they'll leave...
The coin did, but the counterstamp was applied later.
Right. You just send a paper catalog along with every sold item, and that's where you list the weapons of mass destruction. That way, you've...
But, just the opposite of coins and paper money, fakes are allowed....
You misread the link the same way I did the first time. ;)
The non-silver ones are not clad. They're solid nickel, so their edges will look uniform, like a silver coin. Well, here's a correction. ;) Pure...
The fish was on the centennial issue, 1967. Some of those were struck in 80% silver, some in 50% silver. (I hadn't realized that myself.)
It looks like all those Canadian dimes are 1968. Did you have a magnet to check them? Most of the 1968 dimes were minted in 100% nickel, not 50%...
It isn't that slight, is it? Nickel's a bit less ferromagnetic than iron, but it still jumps to a strong magnet.
Metal can move as fast as you need it to, but things get complicated. I didn't go into metallurgy, so that's probably about all I should say. (I...
Somebody was being really inattentive.
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