1958 D Silver Wheat Penny

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Ken, Mar 3, 2006.

  1. Ken

    Ken New Member

    I came across a 1958 D silver looking wheat penny. I have checked the net for the past few days and cannot find anything about it. The edges are raised just like a nickel. Any ideas on this????
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. bga27

    bga27 New Member

    can you post pics? i'd like to see it.
     
  4. Ken

    Ken New Member

    Here are the pics
     
  5. Ken

    Ken New Member

    My file is to big. Is there an email I can send it to?
     
    Gregory Hood likes this.
  6. bga27

    bga27 New Member

  7. bga27

    bga27 New Member

    I have no idea on this. Its very interesting!
     
  8. The_Cave_Troll

    The_Cave_Troll The Coin Troll

    so please post the photo for him....
     
  9. The_Cave_Troll

    The_Cave_Troll The Coin Troll

    I obviously haven't seen the picture yet, but it is VERY likely that this coin is plated with silver, zinc, or mercury. All 3 can be easily done and the first 2 are routinely done as high school chemistry experiments.

    The first diagnostic to see if it really is plated is to weigh it. Take it to a jeweler and have it weighed to the nearest 1/100 of a gram. If it is in the 3.05-3.15 grams range it is plated. if it is more or less than that then it is possible that it is an off metal strike, in which case more testing would need to be done.

    I expect the weight to confirm that it is plated, though.
     
  10. Ken

    Ken New Member

    I weighed the penny at our mail room using a postage meter. I weighed a regular penny...it weighed 0.02 oz, the silver penny weighed 0.03 oz.
     
  11. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    I'll bet your "regular" cent (it's not a "penny") was dated 1982 or later.

    The current copper-plated zinc cents have a nominal weight of 2.5g, which could show up as either 2g or 3g on a postal scale which isn't sensitive enough for coin weighing.

    Wheaties, on the other hand, weighed 3.11g, and would always show up as 3g on a postal scale.

    I used to post a link in this type of thread to a high school chem lab experiment in plating coins, but the site has become "unavailable". Bottom line, it is very easy to color metallic objects to look silvery, using zinc and commonly available materials. Kids do it all the time in chem lab. :D
     
    Endeavor likes this.
  12. Ken

    Ken New Member

    Ok...I di some comparisons on the size, meaybe this will help clarify everything for me.

    I laid a regular penny on the silver penny, the regular laid inside the silver penny. the regu;ar penny fit snugly inside of the silver penny.

    I then used the silver penny and laid it inside of a nickel, which fit snugly.

    I laid a regular penny inside of a nickel and it is loose.

    I hope you can figure this out!
     
  13. satootoko

    satootoko Retired

    That last information makes me think your "silver" cent has been stripped of its copper plating, and hammered between pieces of hard leather, which spreads all the details equally when done properly. In other words, post-strike damage of the kind described >> here <<, just not expanded as much.
     
  14. blovelylinda

    blovelylinda Junior Member

    hi ken i allso have a 1958d penny(silver) ...in fact several.... they were on a bracelet that was my mother in laws let me know if you find anything out,thanks linda
     
  15. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    blovelylinda:
    First, welcome to the forum.
    Second, it is unlikely that the original poster will even see this, it is three years old.

    Third, yours, if on a bracelet, is 99.99999% chance that it is plated.

    But, pictures would help.
     
  16. dbox

    dbox New Member

    hi

    i believe that i have a silver penny just like yours! my grandmother gave it to me awhile back.
    [​IMG]

    theres a picture i hope someone sees this!!!!!!!!!
    HOPE ITS REAL :D
     
  17. ikandiggit

    ikandiggit Currency Error Collector

  18. 10gary22

    10gary22 Junior Member

    I know everyone is referring to chem labs, but way back in the 50-60's era every high school had metal & auto shops. Before the EPA, nearly everyone knew how to run a current through an aquarium tank filled with a chromium solution to plate auto parts and small objects. When I grew up I think we all had some chromed cents. Some were even acid dipped or machined down, then plated and used in vending machines and parking meters in place of dimes.

    Of course, withoput seeing the coin, it's impossible to speculate as to what it is. But don't be disappointed of it is a "doctored" coin. There were sure a lot of them.

    gary
     
  19. troysrboy1

    troysrboy1 New Member

    Wondering if I may have a silver penny, can anyone help me confirm this?

    I weighed both a standard copper penny and the silver looking one I have. The copper one weighed in at 2.5 grams exactly and the silver looking one weighed in at 3.6 grams. As well the copper penny fits inside the silver looking penny. I have attached pictures of the penny and some standard currency to show the differences.

    IMG_4640.jpg IMG_4642.jpg IMG_4644.jpg IMG_4646.jpg IMG_4647.jpg

    Any help would be great.
     
  20. Tomie

    Tomie New Member

    Does that mean it is not worth anything if it is on a bracelet? I have one that has 14 pennies dangling!
     
  21. rickmp

    rickmp Frequently flatulent.

    It's worth 14 cents!
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page