I am curious about something, and, please don't go to any great lengths to answer this question. I am wondering what percent of late date wheaties have been taken out of circulation vs. early date Lincoln Memorials.
So, let's just focus on two years if we can- 1958 (wheat cents) and 1959 (Lincoln Memorials). Let's ignore mintmarks to make things easier.
Does anyone sort their Lincolns by date so they can tell the RC community how many 1958's they have and how many 1959's they have? This would help to determine how many people are taking wheaties out of circulation vs. plain old coppers. Don't do this if you have been buying coins- this should only be done for coins found in change and bank/customer wrapped rolls. Also, if you have been selling some/all of your holdings, that will likely skew the results to make them illegitimate.
Note that to be statistically significant, it is important that you started sorting the 1958's and 1959's at the same time. In other words, if you started sorting 1958's by date ten years ago and only started sorting 1959's in the last year, it will be hard to ascertain legitimate survival rates of the two vs. each other.
If, for instance, there are half as many 1958's found as there are 1959's, that would mean that there are roughly twice as many people who will pull a wheatie out of change vs. just a regular copper cent. Of course the numbers would have to be adjusted for the original mintages of each date.
Again, please don't go to any great lengths on this.
P.S. It would also be interesting to do this with 1964 & 1965 dimes and quarters, but almost nobody saves average circulated 1965's by date. Therefore, it would be much more difficult to come up with a reliable survey for those coins. Perhaps it might be possible to do this with 1959 and 1960 nickels. I'm going to look into doing this for Kennedy halves, comparing 1964's found (90%ers) with all the 40%ers (1965-1969). When I get that info, I will post it as a separate message.