thedeadpoint
Feb 26 2008, 02:45 PM
Well?
Kristofer
Feb 26 2008, 02:49 PM
QUOTE(thedeadpoint @ Feb 26 2008, 09:45 AM)

Well?
I voted florida and rural areas for two reasons. Florida is where older people come to retire, so I figured that might lead to some nice old coins entering into circulation, or older people selling off their collections. I chose the rural areas because less new money enters these areas so you're bound to find some older coins (this is obviously not necessarily true, but my logic.). I think near fed reserve banks is great for the new coins.
just carl
Feb 26 2008, 03:09 PM
Florida is probably one of the worst places to find coins in circulation. I think any place where there is a lot of so called retired people is poor for coins. Many of the older people are the biggest coin collectors. Many such places have numerous coin shows which inspires many people to look at and put aside coins even if they are not collectors. Large cities everywhere basically has the same problem. Also, the larger the city the more access to the internet so more information on coins so more collectors so less coins of any value in change. In many large cities coins are taken to a bank, then sent to the federal reserve in that city or to a company that rolls them. Then they are redistrubted right back to those banks so you end up looking at the same coins repitiously. Very small towns the money just doesn't move out to much so much better ability to find something.
Kristofer
Feb 26 2008, 05:25 PM
QUOTE(just carl @ Feb 26 2008, 10:09 AM)

Florida is probably one of the worst places to find coins in circulation. I think any place where there is a lot of so called retired people is poor for coins. Many of the older people are the biggest coin collectors. Many such places have numerous coin shows which inspires many people to look at and put aside coins even if they are not collectors. Large cities everywhere basically has the same problem. Also, the larger the city the more access to the internet so more information on coins so more collectors so less coins of any value in change. In many large cities coins are taken to a bank, then sent to the federal reserve in that city or to a company that rolls them. Then they are redistrubted right back to those banks so you end up looking at the same coins repitiously. Very small towns the money just doesn't move out to much so much better ability to find something.
Might you say that is... the other side of the coin? HAHAHAHAHHAHaahahaha

I'm sorry, I had to say that. Now I feel ashamed.
TreasureGirl
Feb 26 2008, 05:47 PM
I'm gonna say Midwest (which I thought included the plains states... guess I gotta go back to geography class) because I would think that fewer people here can tell a silver quarter from a clad one than, say, the Northeast.
I also picked small towns because they're more likely than rural areas to have banks, and the localized banks (ex. Blank County Bank vs. U.S. Bank), in my experience, seem more likely to keep around or put aside and forget old rolls of halves and dollars. Also, who was it on here that said they went to a random gas station and saw 3 Morgans in the register and was able to buy them for $1 apiece?
jtryka
Feb 26 2008, 06:00 PM
I think your average midwesterner knows more about silver than anyone on the coasts. To back this up, my best areas for finding silver in circulation were Jersey City, NJ (just outside NYC) and Portland, Oregon. The Midwest (where I am now, as well as growing up in Chicago) was terrible. Lucky to get a 40% silver half in a search of 400 coins!
numismatic nut
Feb 26 2008, 10:03 PM
I find some silver in the mid west (my home area).
Brett
Feb 27 2008, 12:05 AM
I picked New Engalnd. I have found lots of wheat pennies and a few silver coins since i have moved back up here. Some of the remote towns are the best for me.
Dockwalliper
Feb 27 2008, 12:34 AM
Big city = lots of people =lots of coins.
My son pulled lots of older nickels and wheat cents(and a bit of silver) from his deli register on Statin Island last year.
hiho
Feb 27 2008, 09:38 AM
QUOTE(Dockwalliper @ Feb 26 2008, 07:34 PM)

Big city = lots of people =lots of coins.
Agreed. I find all kinds of coins and paper money where I work in New York City.
If I ask random people on the street what a star note is I usually get this response from 99 out of 100...
Also find a ton of foreign coins, and once in awhile a nice US piece when some kid spends a part of his dads collection.
henare
Feb 27 2008, 09:58 AM
i didn't vote ... i do suspect that places like las vegas might be good for searching business strikes.
Dockwalliper
Feb 27 2008, 04:20 PM
QUOTE(hiho @ Feb 27 2008, 04:38 AM)

If I ask random people on the street what a star note is I usually get this response from 99 out of 100...

I would figure they would respond... "Get away from me creep!"
My biased opinion would be the Pacific Northwest. Most of the older stuff floating around are S-mints, and there probably aren't as many collectors relatively.
Coinjoe2006
Mar 4 2008, 12:19 AM
I havent voted, but I would say for circulation, probably the mid west, for the simple fact that you are in the middle of the country and its open territory for P and D mints, where as living ON the east coast, it can take years to get a D state quarter in circulation.
just carl
Mar 4 2008, 04:38 PM
QUOTE(Coinjoe2006 @ Mar 3 2008, 07:19 PM)

I havent voted, but I would say for circulation, probably the mid west, for the simple fact that you are in the middle of the country and its open territory for P and D mints, where as living ON the east coast, it can take years to get a D state quarter in circulation.
Now that is a strange thing. Some years here in the MidWest all you see are D mint coins for several years in change. Then suddenly P coins begin to appear but are all beat up. Then in other years it is just the opposite. Right now all I'm seeing is back to the D mint coins. I go through all type of change including bags from the banks. Doesn't matter where I get coins from, the D or P mint coins vary way to much to say we always get one or the other. Even back when there was S mint coins in Circulation, it was like that. Never could figure out why.
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