henrysmedford wrote:The fun part about tubing your finds is you find trends. We tube all of are pre 59 cents. And after four years of tubing we are five times more likely to find a IH cent than a 1954 cent see -- http://www.realcent.org/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=5364&hilit=+1954. Also here on the west coast the "P" are hard to find. And for a great price on tubes I have found tis Ebay seller does a great job. http://www.ebay.com/sch/Coins-Paper-Money-/11116/i.html?_ipg=&_sac=1&_from=&_nkw=&_armrs=1&_ssn=jandpcollectibles
SilverDragon72 wrote:Sorted 50 FV in nickels....found a Buffalo and a 1943 War nick!
2 more tubes full for my archives....down to less than 20 left!
scyther wrote:SilverDragon72 wrote:Sorted 50 FV in nickels....found a Buffalo and a 1943 War nick!
2 more tubes full for my archives....down to less than 20 left!
Tubes full of what? War, Buffalo, pre-60...?
stlouiscoin wrote:InfleXion wrote:Please forgive my ignorance, but what is significant about pre-1960's nickels? The composition is the same other than war nickels. Is there something numismatic about them?
I want so say the the compesitiong changed in 59 and the ones pre-60 are worth something like 7.5 cents right now.
scyther wrote:Yeah, I really wouldn't save 64 and older. 64 has the highest mintage ever, although it's probably not the most common in circulation due to attrition. Some people save all pre- 70, in which case you may as well save 64s... maybe... but if you save 64s, you should also save the rarer 65-67... in other words... draw the line at 59, 63, or 69, not at 64.
(Personally, I just save pre-60.)
SilverDragon72 wrote:I found a 2009-D, a Canadian cupronickel and a 20 pence coin. Completed 3 more full tubes for my collection.
J_Dodge wrote:
Can someone tell me what the significance of the 2009-D is?
Thanks
JD
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