appjoe wrote:Well I went to the flea market today and his War nickels were $1.25 so I passed on them. I picked up 4 Franklin Halves at $8.50 ea. and a VF 1880 O Morgan Dollar for $20.00 I think I got a good deal for the Franklins and the Morgan dollar.
999Ni wrote:just because they are high in manganese, doesn't make them a bad investment. Realistically what's gonna happen? Are you gonna take them to a smelter and have the silver separated OR are you just gonna sell them down the road on ebay, craigslist, whatever, for the silver melt value. the latter i think.
stateofmind wrote:999Ni wrote:just because they are high in manganese, doesn't make them a bad investment. Realistically what's gonna happen? Are you gonna take them to a smelter and have the silver separated OR are you just gonna sell them down the road on ebay, craigslist, whatever, for the silver melt value. the latter i think.
War nickels are undesirable. This is illustrated by the ability to buy war nickels UNDER spot, usually by a large percentage. When it's time to sell, they will be looked at as the worst kind of silver to hold, as the manganese content does make a difference. It corrupts the silver content making it extremely hard to refine. As I said, If you can by them for greatly under spot, good. Sell them and buy real silver.
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