I was at a new coin shop today and I picked up a penny and a dime blank planchet and I passed on the quarter due to its 20.00 price. Well looking on various places it seems the penny , dime and quarters go for under 20.00 but every place I seen a nickel it was very expensive is there any reason for this? Or was it just a coincidence? Thanks
Are you referring to coin blanks or blank planchets? There is a difference. Blanks don't make it through the upsetting mill where the rim is formed. Planchets do. Chris
Ahh ok my penny looks like it has no "punched" rim , my dime does. So i guess that means I have a dime blank planchets. So in that case was 10.00 bux for a dime planchet a good deal? Also why does it seem theres pennys, dimes and quarter blanks on websites for sale but it seems nickel planchets are not as available?
First, the correct terminology is upset rim. The rim is not punched. The blank is rolled and squeezed to form the upset rim. The "nickel union" employees have a better contract with built-in bonuses for finding them before they leave the Mint. Chris
Never heard of that, wonder if the employee's are fighting over the blanks. Bonus's must be huge because nickel blanks are on the scarce side...
too much for the dime and a quarter should cost 5-7 bucks Redbook for nickels is 15 bucks but i got mine for a buck
Well I knew better than to buy the quarter but a I figured getting the penny for a dollar made up for the higher price for the dime at 10.00