IdahoCopper wrote:I've been thinking of this lately. A spreadsheet is needed that calculates the .999 ounces silver in 90% and 40% US coins, as weighed by a gram scale. This would give the exact silver content regardless of the loss to wear on the slick and old coins.
IdahoCopper wrote:I've been thinking of this lately. A spreadsheet is needed that calculates the .999 ounces silver in 90% and 40% US coins, as weighed by a gram scale. This would give the exact silver content regardless of the loss to wear on the slick and old coins.
brian0918 wrote:IdahoCopper wrote:I've been thinking of this lately. A spreadsheet is needed that calculates the .999 ounces silver in 90% and 40% US coins, as weighed by a gram scale. This would give the exact silver content regardless of the loss to wear on the slick and old coins.
That wouldn't work for 40% halves, because the outer clad layer is a higher silver content (80% silver, 20% copper) than the inner core (20.9% silver, 79.1% copper).
Market Harmony wrote:A $1 coin weighs more than 2 halves, 4 quarters, or 10 dimes... it's just the way they made them... foolish, illogical, but the way it was done...
A dollar (new, unworn) should CONTAIN .7734 ozt of fine silver
Typical 90% coinage (Half, Quarter, Dime) that is circulated and commonly traded as "junk silver" contains 715 ozt of fine silver in a $1000 bag... so, if you work that backwards, then a dollar face value has .715 ozt of fine silver. This number varies with the quality of silver... $10 face of 1964 Kennedy Halves will weigh more than $10 face of Barber Halves
IdahoCopper wrote:brian0918 wrote:IdahoCopper wrote:I've been thinking of this lately. A spreadsheet is needed that calculates the .999 ounces silver in 90% and 40% US coins, as weighed by a gram scale. This would give the exact silver content regardless of the loss to wear on the slick and old coins.
That wouldn't work for 40% halves, because the outer clad layer is a higher silver content (80% silver, 20% copper) than the inner core (20.9% silver, 79.1% copper).
So overall, is it 40% silver, or not?
uthminsta wrote:Interesting math, for sure. But in most of my dealings, 40% halves trade at under spot price. Wear shouldn't really affect sales prices as much. I also don't see a lot of 40% slicks.
I've always used one simple magic number: Face value times .723 is actual silver ounces.
For dollars, which I buy much less often because there's almost always a premium, the magic number is .773.
IdahoCopper wrote:Here is the spreadsheet for calculating US coins, sterling and 1oz bullion:
http://www.idahocopper.com/AgCoinCalc.xls
Market Harmony wrote:A $1 coin weighs more than 2 halves, 4 quarters, or 10 dimes... it's just the way they made them... foolish, illogical, but the way it was done...
scrapper2010 wrote:Market Harmony wrote:A $1 coin weighs more than 2 halves, 4 quarters, or 10 dimes... it's just the way they made them... foolish, illogical, but the way it was done...
This fact strikes me as very odd. It makes it so that 10 dimes have (slightly) less silver than 4 quarters, which have less silver than 2 halves, which have less silver than 1 silver dollar. So when a person buys a certain FV in 90% coinage it seems to be worth your while to know how much of it is dimes, quarters, halves etc. Especially if buying a large quantity.
scrapper2010 wrote:Market Harmony wrote:A $1 coin weighs more than 2 halves, 4 quarters, or 10 dimes... it's just the way they made them... foolish, illogical, but the way it was done...
This fact strikes me as very odd. It makes it so that 10 dimes have (slightly) less silver than 4 quarters, which have less silver than 2 halves, which have less silver than 1 silver dollar. So when a person buys a certain FV in 90% coinage it seems to be worth your while to know how much of it is dimes, quarters, halves etc. Especially if buying a large quantity.
68Camaro wrote:scrapper2010 wrote:Market Harmony wrote:A $1 coin weighs more than 2 halves, 4 quarters, or 10 dimes... it's just the way they made them... foolish, illogical, but the way it was done...
This fact strikes me as very odd. It makes it so that 10 dimes have (slightly) less silver than 4 quarters, which have less silver than 2 halves, which have less silver than 1 silver dollar. So when a person buys a certain FV in 90% coinage it seems to be worth your while to know how much of it is dimes, quarters, halves etc. Especially if buying a large quantity.
Fractional coinage in the early days was exactly proportional to the dollar, which was 27 grams of 89.243% silver.
The coinage act of 1837 changed the alloy to an even 90% silver. The new silver dollar had the same amount of silver, but weighed slightly less overall due to the math.
The coinage act of 1857 devalued the fractional coinage to ~93.1% of the silver dollar, to reduce melt-downs because foreign rates paid were making it favorable to melt the coin and export it.
The fractional coinage from that point to 1964 have each had exactly the same proportional amount of silver:
halves: 25 grams total weight, 90% silver
quarters 12.5 grams total weight, 90% silver
dimes: 6.25 grams total weight, 90% silver
$10 of fractional, no matter the face, is exactly 250 grams of 90% silver. Multiply by .9 to get the grams of silver. Divide that by 31.1 to get the toz of silver.
I've got the whole flippin' history in several tabs of a spreadsheet, but it's easy to make your own.
The only differences between the types are that the smaller coins wear faster than the larger ones, so that circulated dimes have less silver in them, normally, than halves.
68Camaro wrote:The fractional coinage from that point to 1964 have each had exactly the same proportional amount of silver:
halves: 25 grams total weight, 90% silver
quarters 12.5 grams total weight, 90% silver
dimes: 6.25 grams total weight, 90% silver
Lemon Thrower wrote:$1 FV silver dollars has .76 troy ounce of silver.
$1 FV 90% has .715 troy ounce of silver.
$1 FV 40% has .295 troy ounce of silver.
uthminsta wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:$1 FV silver dollars has .76 troy ounce of silver.
$1 FV 90% has .715 troy ounce of silver.
$1 FV 40% has .295 troy ounce of silver.
Where do you get that?
$1 FV silver dollars has .773 troy ounce of silver.
$1 FV 90% has .723 troy ounce of silver.
brian0918 wrote:68Camaro wrote:The fractional coinage from that point to 1964 have each had exactly the same proportional amount of silver:
halves: 25 grams total weight, 90% silver
quarters 12.5 grams total weight, 90% silver
dimes: 6.25 grams total weight, 90% silver
That's not what I'm seeing at coinflation:
Halves: 12.5 grams total weight
Quarters: 6.25 grams total weight
Dimes: 2.5 grams total weight
But their silver amounts still work out right. A quarter has 2.5 times the silver of a dime, and a half has 2 times the silver of a quarter.
Return to Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests