Any one know about how much should i pay for this

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by MeganM, Feb 5, 2018.

  1. MeganM

    MeganM New Member

  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Dave363

    Dave363 Well-Known Member

    Hi MeganM it would help in the future if you would crop all back ground out, also rotate your coin.
    And select full image when you post it appears that you have a very well circulated coin
    I believe the value would be melt (silver) JMHO but wait for others with more experience.
    Dave
     
    352sdeer likes this.
  4. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    $1.50-2.00 ?
     
    Last edited: Feb 5, 2018
  5. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Well-Known Member

  6. MeganM

    MeganM New Member

    Thanks. I screenshot what the guy sent me a not Thinking to edit it first
     
  7. MeganM

    MeganM New Member

  8. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I will guess about $2. Melt is about $1.21
     
  9. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    It looks like the coin has been improperly cleaned (whizzed). I wouldn't pay more than melt value for it.

    Chris
     
  10. longshot

    longshot Enthusiast Supporter

    I think around $1.40
     
    Kentucky likes this.
  11. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Fairly common so melt is about $1.20-$1.25 meaning that's about what I'd pay. If I needed that date to plug a hole in my album then $1.50. Welcome to CT.
     
    juris klavins likes this.
  12. RICHARD K

    RICHARD K MISTY & SASHA

    Not much, but if you are interested is collecting merc. dimes , pennies etc. I would recommend purchasing the US 2018 71ST. EDITION RED BOOK. It's a very good book to see mintages and current prices , a must have type book, for collectors.
     
  13. RICHARD K

    RICHARD K MISTY & SASHA

     
  14. RICHARD K

    RICHARD K MISTY & SASHA

  15. Packrat

    Packrat Well-Known Member

    Red Book is great for information, but maybe not for pricing as it could have been compiled months before purchase.
     
  16. LA_Geezer

    LA_Geezer Well-Known Member

    I am in the process of finishing my first complete Mercury Dime set. I see by my sniper page that somebody outbid me for the three 1926 dimes. I had set $13.00 as my bid, somebody else got them for 13.50 + $2 for shipping. The coins were slightly better than the one in your photos, so I am guessing that @spirityoda is right on.
     
    352sdeer likes this.
  17. RICHARD K

    RICHARD K MISTY & SASHA

    Yes this is true but at least it gives an idea what you are buying , mintages etc.
     
    352sdeer likes this.
  18. David Setree Rare Coins

    David Setree Rare Coins Well-Known Member

    It depends on how badly you want it.

    I am the highest buyer for Banknotes from my hometown.

    I will pay whatever I have to pay to get one because I want it. I will pay more than anyone else because I want it more than anyone else.

    If you want it real bad you'll pay.

    for that particular item I wouldn't pay more than a buck.
     
    George McClellan and Stevearino like this.
  19. juris klavins

    juris klavins Well-Known Member

    It's not a collectible coin so the max to pay for it is spot + 3% = $1.25 ;)
     
  20. RICHARD K

    RICHARD K MISTY & SASHA

    I see that you collect currency, I dabble also in fed .res. notes . I have (2) 1934 J KANSAS CITY MULES. Would you consider to have these notes graded? eave if they come back maybe 25 or so. the book says there are only a few known to exsist. these are star notes
     
  21. juris klavins

    juris klavins Well-Known Member

    The Blue Book has more realistic prices, i.e. what a dealer might offer - if you're buying or selling privately, the actual pricing should fall somewhere between Red & Blue quotes
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page