Hmm. A thousand dollars worth of copper cents would weigh over 680 pounds. If his little girl is that strong, you'd probably better not cross him!
So, on a closer look, the plastic of the packaging forms a "cup" to hold the coin capsule, with a cutout to get a finger in. Removing the capsules...
That's awfully, awfully tempting. I wonder, though, just how dangerous the terrain is, if they haven't been recovered yet. I've got some...
Except that it did at one point in the last year or two -- first-class postage rates dropped by a couple of cents, probably because the last...
Ooh, can't wait to try that on my Apollo coins! :troll:
And the shipped material can't contain any advertisements, which means you can't use it to send magazines, which really gets under my skin. Not...
That would definitely be the teller's problem, not yours! For 37 keepers from a box, I'd let the tellers look at me any way they please...
Why'd you stop, then? :) Welcome to CoinTalk!
...but then all the newly-rich with their parking-lot treasures would have to hijack existing threads.
What do you mean, "make them flat"? Pound on them with a hammer?
I think people are suggesting two dips: first in acetone, to remove any oils still on the surface, then in diluted EZEst or the like to remove the...
Ah, thanks. I'll give that a very gentle try when I get home.
No, there are holes punched in the cardboard to expose the reverses.
Dang. I can only remember what the last two letters stand for. Edit: whoops, it came back to me just as I was starting to type in a search.
Right back atcha. ;) The Core of Scientific Inquiry, as demonstrated by a young scientist: "Who says?" "Who's he?" "How does he know?"
Separate names with a comma.