Recyclersteve wrote:One other thing- there are probably a few people out there who think that ALL 1982's are copper, which is obviously wrong. And many in this group might not want to go back and re-sort their stacks just to pull out zincs from a single year.
I would say more than a few. Enough to make any batch of coins containing 82s suspect, no matter who sorted them.
Machine sorters are out of luck on that score. But why hurt the marketability of a hand-sorted batch when it's so easy to exclude them? It's not too difficult to have a separate container for copper 82s.
I actually tried to sell a ctu of copper 82s here a few years ago (when reasonably priced bags were selling at a good pace), at way below typical pricing of the time. No interest. My take away from that was if knowledgeable Realcenters decided they were second class or otherwise undesireable, how would they be perceived in the general market?
In other words, how do convince someone on craigslist 15 years from now that the 1982 Lincolns in your bags are all good? More importantly, all other considerations being equal...if that buyer had to choose between yours and a bag of 1959 - 1981, why would they buy yours? Remember now, your good sorting is going to be lumped in with all the bozos who unknowingly, or knowingly, left in the zincs.
In the end I stopped separating the 82s altogether when I figured out it wasn't worth the extra effort.
You get what?.. 30, 40 or 50 out of a $25 box? Not to make a mole hill out of a mountain but that amounts to only 50lbs of copper per year if you sort 15 boxes a month every month.