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robtgossard

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Posts posted by robtgossard

  1. Instead of doing that, you can use conversion factor:

    .0321507466 = ounce/gram conversion factor

    .00220462262 = pound/gram conversion factor

    So
    the value of a Mercury silver dime which weighs 2.5 grams and has
    composition of 90% silver and 10% copper could be calculated as:

    1.
    Calculate 90% silver value: 21.73 (silver price) ×.0321507466
    (conversion factor) × 2.5 (coin’s weight) × .90 (percentage silver ) =
    $1.5719303781

    2. Calculate 10% copper value : 3.2819 × .00220462262 × 2.5× .10 = $0.0018086

    3. Add the two together: $1.5719303781 + $0.0018086 = $1.5737389781

    $1.5737389781 is the total melt value for Mercury silver dime on October 7, 2013.

    Source: coinflation.com

  2. I’d say never clean your coin. An awkward looking coin can get you more value than one that’s cleaned to look like a sparkling new one. Instead, put your efforts in finding someone who’d be interested to buy the very coin you have, with the mint date and mint it’s struck at. You get more for your coin with a coin collector than a coin dealer.

  3. Whao!! Dramatic coin designs. Guess the Chinese’s contributions to the world of coins are popular dragon designs and…. the lunar series coins. World’s most reputed government mints including the U.K. mint, Canadian mint through to the Australian Perth mint issue coins that honor the Chinese lunar year. This year for the first time in the U.K. mint’s history of 1,100 years, they issued silver Britannia with a privy marked rim. The privy mark on the rim is of a Chinese snake that represents the “Year of the Snake”.

  4.  

    g9sMpjP.jpg
    ILNv5e9.jpg
    I was wondering if anyone knew about these coins? I found them in an attic when I moved into my house. They appear to be chinese in origin? Unsure of dates or even if they are real or replicas.
    Any info would be most appreciated, (if they are worth anything, history, how to tell if they are fake, etc)
    Thank you guys so much!

     

     

    Even if they are fake, you don’t need to be disheartened. You haven’t lost any money; they were just lying there in the attic.

  5. Guess there is nothing that can match the feel of the coin in your hand and perhaps that’s why there hasn’t been a compelling demand for such a catalog. True people have been buying and selling coins on eBay, and companies have been making a catalog of coins and offering them as mobile apps, there still remains a gap which is, as I see, more of a ‘will’ issue than a ‘skill’ issue.

  6. A picture would definitely be of a great help. From what you described, I’m just guessing in the dark that the coin is not an Indian coin as they have some inscriptions in English too. And gathering from the second clue that the coins are thin, probably it’s a gold token. You can just randomly look for gold coin collections, and who knows you find out what coin you have. Alternatively, you might find your coin in the American Numismatic Society's MANTIS collection. You’ll need to select from the coin type – Greek, Medieval, South Asian and so on, and check out each section. It’s tedious but worth the effort. Try out your luck :)

  7. It’s good to know that coin collecting runs in the family. I guess your father should be the right guide in assisting you with the best collections. However, you must try your hands on completing either of the series of $10 Liberty coin reigning from 1838-1907 or series $5 Liberty gold coin that reigned from 1840-1907.

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