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<p>[QUOTE="SilverWilliesCoinsdotcom, post: 2824931, member: 86795"]Every now and then you get a coin that somebody's driven a hole through, and sometimes they're really nice looking coins except for the oddity that you can see through them. This sort of decreases the devalue obviously, so a while back I took a twist tie and started threading my holed coins on it. Sort of a makeshift good luck charm. This particular collection of them is three coins... an 1857 Seated Liberty dime, a really nice 1862 Indian Head Cent, and an 1853 silver Three Cent piece... Without the holes these things would grade fairly high and be worth quite a bit, but together you add them up and it's $0.14 14 cents face value and 14 is a lucky number and it's kind of an interesting little trinket... These coins definitely circulated during the Civil War, and $0.14 might not seem like a lot today but back then the average Union and Confederate soldiers each made only $0.51 a day and $0.14 would buy you something pretty nice. I've never wondered what the melt value of a $0.03 silver piece was. I learned something today checking on it just now while I was writing this, the silver $0.03 pieces were minted from 1851 to 1873 and they were 75% silver 25% copper they weighed 0.8 grams face value $0.03 and the melt value as of today the 14th of August 2017 is .3294 so it's worth about $0.33 in melt value, how about that? The dime is 90% silver and melts to $1.3159... total silver value $1.6453... And don't forget the copper. In any case there's probably not a lot of money to be made melting down $0.03 silver pieces, ya think? Oh wait... what would the holes weigh?</p><p><br /></p><p><img src="https://scontent-ort2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/20770310_10211775561178328_4306332723732635426_n.jpg?oh=005840f9ee2f4dc86e116ced4f595bf9&oe=5A1C3A37" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" /></p><p><img src="https://scontent-ort2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/20729672_10211775559618289_4747533163115964632_n.jpg?oh=b3c903b951e214f467244b44d38641bd&oe=5A37900A" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" />[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="SilverWilliesCoinsdotcom, post: 2824931, member: 86795"]Every now and then you get a coin that somebody's driven a hole through, and sometimes they're really nice looking coins except for the oddity that you can see through them. This sort of decreases the devalue obviously, so a while back I took a twist tie and started threading my holed coins on it. Sort of a makeshift good luck charm. This particular collection of them is three coins... an 1857 Seated Liberty dime, a really nice 1862 Indian Head Cent, and an 1853 silver Three Cent piece... Without the holes these things would grade fairly high and be worth quite a bit, but together you add them up and it's $0.14 14 cents face value and 14 is a lucky number and it's kind of an interesting little trinket... These coins definitely circulated during the Civil War, and $0.14 might not seem like a lot today but back then the average Union and Confederate soldiers each made only $0.51 a day and $0.14 would buy you something pretty nice. I've never wondered what the melt value of a $0.03 silver piece was. I learned something today checking on it just now while I was writing this, the silver $0.03 pieces were minted from 1851 to 1873 and they were 75% silver 25% copper they weighed 0.8 grams face value $0.03 and the melt value as of today the 14th of August 2017 is .3294 so it's worth about $0.33 in melt value, how about that? The dime is 90% silver and melts to $1.3159... total silver value $1.6453... And don't forget the copper. In any case there's probably not a lot of money to be made melting down $0.03 silver pieces, ya think? Oh wait... what would the holes weigh? [IMG]https://scontent-ort2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/20770310_10211775561178328_4306332723732635426_n.jpg?oh=005840f9ee2f4dc86e116ced4f595bf9&oe=5A1C3A37[/IMG] [IMG]https://scontent-ort2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/20729672_10211775559618289_4747533163115964632_n.jpg?oh=b3c903b951e214f467244b44d38641bd&oe=5A37900A[/IMG][/QUOTE]
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show me your 3 cent coin; grade it if you want
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