Rolled Coins

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Chrispl57, Oct 5, 2011.

  1. Chrispl57

    Chrispl57 New Member

    Just today i started looking into rolled pennies from my credit union.

    I was just wondering what pennies should i look for mainly and what errors should i look for.


    I've been coin collecting for a month now so sorta new to everything =)
     
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  3. NOS

    NOS Former Coin Hoarder

    I just bought 2 boxes of pennies today for the first time. What I'm looking for are older high-grade pennies up into the 1990s. I'll note what wheats I find but by and large I will just spend those as I have more than enough common date wheat cents. I am also on the lookout for pre-1920 pennies as I have never found a coin from before that year for any denomination. Now my problem is rerolling all of these coins, it is tedious and will take alot of time. I have been trying to just search one roll at a time to avoid having to count the coins but this method is also time consuming...
     
  4. Chrispl57

    Chrispl57 New Member

    Yea it is time consuming. I was pretty much just dumping them out of the roll then placing them back in as i checked, however i started small all i did was 4 rolls.


    I got some nice near mint 1977-2011 coins, and maybe a wide am I'm not 100% if it is or not gonna post a picture later.

    Edit: also should i hold onto all the 95% copper coins and just toss the zinc ones?
     
  5. vtvick777

    vtvick777 Member

    Hi Chris, welcome to CoinTalk. For pennies there are a few decisions you'll have to make while you are searching. Some people hoard copper, which are pennies dates 1981 and earlier, as an investment because they were made with 95% copper before 1982, and already are worth more than 0.01. I have had success selling copper pennies on ebay, averaging 1.5x face value on $200 sold, although that probably won't be the case anymore because copper has dropped from 4.50 to ~3.00 in the last few weeks. Most people take out wheaties and any indian heads if they are lucky enough to find them. I take out the Canadians, and other foreign coins I find, just for fun. As for errors, there are a ton of them. This site does a pretty good job of listing the errors to look for http://www.collectorscorner.org/pocket.html As you can see there are so many errors its probably not worth it to look for them all, so pick the ones that interest you. I personally look for the famous 1955 Double Die, the 1972 Double Die, the 1999 Wide AM, and the 1995 Double Die, which is my avatar picture. In about $1000 worth of pennies I have found 2. Good luck!
     
  6. Chrispl57

    Chrispl57 New Member

    Thanks for the advice vtvic deffinity will be on the look out for the 1995 =P guessing its best to use a magnifying glass or by plain sight good enough for looking for errors?
     
  7. stlouiscoin

    stlouiscoin New Member

    I would save copper, some people buy them close to 2 cents a piece, all errors, rare dates, wheats, and unusal stuff. All to all of you saying it's a pain in the butt to reroll cents, It is a pain in the butt so I don't do it. I'm a member of us bank, And they don't charge their members anything to dump coins into their coin counter machine.(I actually just became a member to use their coin counter.)
     
  8. Chrispl57

    Chrispl57 New Member

    Yea my bank used to have a coin counter that was free but they recently removed the machine sadly
     
  9. chip

    chip Novice collector

    checking rolls of cents from your bank or credit union is an inexpensive way to enjoy the hobby. I bought a copy of the cherry pickers guide to check for varieties. I am glad I did, I have not found anything great yet, but I am starting to know what to look for, and eventually the law of averages will catch up and I will find something worth talking about
     
  10. NOS

    NOS Former Coin Hoarder

    My bank has a coin counter as well but I had a conversation with a teller about it after they started charging 10% to those without an account (still free for account holders). She told me how they pay per bag to have the coins shipped out and all. They also have a notice that it isn't for commercial use. I don't run a business but I don't think they'd like it if I dumped in boxes full of coins on a regular basis. So for right now I'm content with counting 50 pennies at a time (I count by three's) and rerolling them back into their clear plastic wrappers.
     
  11. Chrispl57

    Chrispl57 New Member

    Ah that sucks for the banks now i see why mine removed it.

    Also what other coins besides are fun and profitable to buy rolls of sorry for asking so many questions =P
     
  12. Rainyday

    Rainyday New Member

    Every two weeks or so I go to the bank and get a $22 in pennies and 20 rolls of nickles for the war nickles. I bought a pre-1982 sorter off of ebay for $40 that came with 5lbs of copper pennies so I figured it really only cost me about $25. So now it only takes me about a hour to sort $22 worth and then I run them through a royal sovergn auto sorter to roll them back up which takes about five minutes. I used to get the $25 bank boxes but I found the pre 82 ratio to be much lower than just the stuff people turn in hand rolled. I keep all the pre 82s and return everything else.
     
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