68Camaro wrote:The cut-off point for "full" weight is typically 1953-ish for halves, and a year or two newer for quarters ~1955, and newer still for dimes ~1956-57. In that lot it was hard to put together a full weight roll in halves before the war (I think I managed 1 or 2), it became difficult in quarters by mid 40s, and difficult in dimes by late 40s.
beauanderos wrote:715 is a standard that was implemented at least fifteen years ago when junk silver was sold in mixed denomination silver bags. With the passage of time, and the inevitable application of Gresham's Law (keeping your best coins, selling your worst) the standard is losing its applicability. Your own private stash probably exceeds 715 if you've stuck with newer denominations, but that purchased from large online dealers will frequently be considerably less than 715. You WILL NOT find an online dealer, anywhere, that can supply you with a $100 face bag of Walker halves, Mercury dimes, Standing Liberty quarters, or any of the Barber series that weighs in at 715. More likely those will be 670 to 690. Those coins have to be at least XF to AU to retain that gram wt... and they sell as numies, not as bullion. You could buy (from a limited amount of sellers) coins that were all XF or better... but then you would likely pay a minimum of twenty to thirty percent above melt to obtain them. Those series should not be bought as bullion, not if you want the best bang for your buck. Now if you're combining collecting with stacking, then that's a different matter. Another member was telling me how he bought a large amount of dimes from Gainesville (recommended by many as your best source for cheapest silver) and he got less than 700 when he weighed them. Trust me, no online dealer is going to reimburse you 15 oz when you call them later to complain that your bag was light. Realistically, and I think you'll see this implemented eventually, the standard should be lowered to 710, if not 705. The wt variability is one reason I like newly produced 999 silver fractionals.
Lemon Thrower wrote:68Camaro wrote:The cut-off point for "full" weight is typically 1953-ish for halves, and a year or two newer for quarters ~1955, and newer still for dimes ~1956-57. In that lot it was hard to put together a full weight roll in halves before the war (I think I managed 1 or 2), it became difficult in quarters by mid 40s, and difficult in dimes by late 40s.
that's about right. i have a lot of full weight WLs, but generally i agree.
easiest thing to do is stick to JFK's and Bens. because they are larger, they are easier to work with.
68Camaro wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:68Camaro wrote:The cut-off point for "full" weight is typically 1953-ish for halves, and a year or two newer for quarters ~1955, and newer still for dimes ~1956-57. In that lot it was hard to put together a full weight roll in halves before the war (I think I managed 1 or 2), it became difficult in quarters by mid 40s, and difficult in dimes by late 40s.
that's about right. i have a lot of full weight WLs, but generally i agree.
easiest thing to do is stick to JFK's and Bens. because they are larger, they are easier to work with.
I exaggerated a bit on the low side on my walkers - I know I have more than a couple of rolls, but (now you've made me go look at my spreadsheet) it's a far lower number. 13% Walkers, 30% Franklins, 58% JFKs. But those ARE biased because I purposely weeded out low weight coins and focused on purchase full weight coins. But it's probably indicative of how relatively easy each are to get.
beauanderos wrote:Your ratio of coins kept is not accurate if applied to coins acquired as it is likely skewed by intentional heavier purchases of pure Kennedy rolls. Only one in a million Kennedy halves will show wear greater than 715. However, the probability of Walkers vs Franklins is more likely to be close to the mark. One could, thus, presume from your figures that you would be twice as likely to find full wt Franklins than Walkers (although the percentage is actually much higher). Most mixed date Franklin rolls will range from 712 to 719, Walkers 698 to 713, Barbers 650 to 690, Kennedy's 720 to 723. Very few online dealers sell mixed denomination bags anymore, and most charge a premium for half dollar bags. In spite of their lighter wt, a premium is still charged on Mercury dime bags vs Rosies, and Walker halves bags vs Franklins and Kennedy's, catering to the perception/hope of collector's/investor's that some dates of great value can be found in "unsearched" bags. The same holds true with all Barber denominations, to an even greater extent. Will you find something that would make the price disparity worth what you lose in bullion value? Could happen, probably won't.
68Camaro wrote:beauanderos wrote:Your ratio of coins kept is not accurate if applied to coins acquired as it is likely skewed by intentional heavier purchases of pure Kennedy rolls. Only one in a million Kennedy halves will show wear greater than 715. However, the probability of Walkers vs Franklins is more likely to be close to the mark. One could, thus, presume from your figures that you would be twice as likely to find full wt Franklins than Walkers (although the percentage is actually much higher). Most mixed date Franklin rolls will range from 712 to 719, Walkers 698 to 713, Barbers 650 to 690, Kennedy's 720 to 723. Very few online dealers sell mixed denomination bags anymore, and most charge a premium for half dollar bags. In spite of their lighter wt, a premium is still charged on Mercury dime bags vs Rosies, and Walker halves bags vs Franklins and Kennedy's, catering to the perception/hope of collector's/investor's that some dates of great value can be found in "unsearched" bags. The same holds true with all Barber denominations, to an even greater extent. Will you find something that would make the price disparity worth what you lose in bullion value? Could happen, probably won't.
Agree - I've bought a LOT of nothing but JFKs exactly for the reason of weight. On the other hand, I've hardly ever seen an underweight JFK, so essentially all are full weight. And if I'm not mistaken they made about as many of the 64 JFKs as they did all the Franklins put together. I'm in a rush to turn the computer off so I can let the drywall guy cover it, else I would look the numbers up, but there were an astonishing number of them made. Billions of bucks in silver, at today's spot. No wonder they ran out of silver for the other coins!
Engineer wrote:Sounds like you did it the hard way Ray. For future reference, just copy and paste that stuff into Excel, and then use the autosum feature.
Engineer wrote:Sounds like you did it the hard way Ray. For future reference, just copy and paste that stuff into Excel, and then use the autosum feature.
68Camaro wrote:
Lemon Thrower wrote:
beauanderos wrote:
OneBiteAtATime wrote:68Camaro wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:beauanderos wrote:
This is what I'm talking about when I say standing on the shoulders of giants. I love to learn from men of wisdom!
beauanderos wrote:Engineer wrote:Sounds like you did it the hard way Ray. For future reference, just copy and paste that stuff into Excel, and then use the autosum feature.
Can you do that with the Walker mintages and post the result here? Thanks!
beauanderos wrote:You're just short. Everyone's a giant
OneBiteAtATime wrote:beauanderos wrote:You're just short. Everyone's a giant
leaning in the bellies of the rotund.
Engineer wrote:Yeah...but you'll have to wait until I've finished my chili smothered fritos.
edit:
485,320,640....burp.
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