Kurr wrote:If you melt U.S Cents or Nickels for their metal content you are in violation of federal law.
HOWEVER.... we have no laws against melting OTHER countries coins.
Unless you have experiance in foundry work or melting/casting copper I would refrain from the attempt. The equipment to do it safely is exspensive and the process is extremely dangerous and hazardous.
pops9653 wrote:Kurr wrote:If you melt U.S Cents or Nickels for their metal content you are in violation of federal law.
HOWEVER.... we have no laws against melting OTHER countries coins.
Unless you have experiance in foundry work or melting/casting copper I would refrain from the attempt. The equipment to do it safely is exspensive and the process is extremely dangerous and hazardous.
We may not have laws that prohibit you melting another countries coins but you can still be prosecuted for it by The US Government if the other country has a law against it. I would check with an attorney on any thing you think could get you in trouble.
This is false. The other countries laws do not apply in the U.S
Z00 wrote:This is false. The other countries laws do not apply in the U.S
You may want to check the fine print in the NAFTA agreement. I seem to recall a provision regarding an honoring and prosecuting each other's laws.
Kurr wrote:If you melt U.S Cents or Nickels for their metal content you are in violation of federal law.
HOWEVER.... we have no laws against melting OTHER countries coins.
Unless you have experiance in foundry work or melting/casting copper I would refrain from the attempt. The equipment to do it safely is exspensive and the process is extremely dangerous and hazardous.
Kurr wrote:I have had metal crucibles give way on me and had several pounds of molten metal drop out to the ground and run at me. I was very lucky. I had a smallish amount, was working in a specialy prepared area outside, knew it was a distinct possibility and was watching, and knew in advance what to do if it happened, and why I was watching for that particular problem to begin with.
Not to mention gassing issues. I have had sickness myself from melting metals and copper alloy is not one you need to be getting any whifs from. It can kill you.
I did start with the qualifier unless -you have experiance-. You said it yourself those folks have 1500 years of experiance with those resources and techniques and a whole tribe of other experienced people.
Besides, it begs the question, unless you have an industrial use for them ... why? They are already in a recognised form, much more easily divisible, are already an established currency, serve well as bullion as they are, contain numismatic premiums OR potential numismatic premiums, I mean why turn all that upside into a brick that will float on one manipulated "spot price"?
everything wrote:Once we hoard them all, taking them hostage, bit higher copper prices, maybe we can start to negotiate..
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