I have several thousand of the non-nickel CA's that the ryedale spit out when I purchased several hundred pounds of 99% CAs.
Are there certain years that are valuable, some seem to be copper and others have a chrome type coating on them.
mtalbot_ca wrote:Hello my friend,
Where do I begin.....
All pre-1960 nickels are worth saving.
All non-nickel types are from the following years:
1942-43 : Tombac (Alloy: 88% copper, 12% zinc) the 1942 year has also the .999 nickel variety - Depending on condition, but always worth at least 50 cents
1944-45: Steel and chrome - With a lot of rust 5 cents, but with minimal rust 10 cent, but if no rust at least 25 cents. Beware some are missing chrome and they are worth 5-10 dollars.
1951-54: Steel and chrome, the 1951 year has also a .999 nickel variety showing a nickel refinery. Missing chromes are a lot more expensive. Other are 10 cents each for average circulated.
Hope this help.
TwoAndAHalfCents wrote:I stopped at a local coin store today and bought up the Canadian nickels they had at five cents a piece - all $2 worth. There was a 1944 steel V nickel in the batch that the dealer quickly pulled out and said it was worth more than the rest and I couldn't have it for five cents. No big deal to me since I was just interested in the .999 nickel anyway. But to collectors those older steel ones must hold some small premium.
camtender wrote:I have several thousand of the non-nickel CA's that the ryedale spit out when I purchased several hundred pounds of 99% CAs.
Are there certain years that are valuable, some seem to be copper and others have a chrome type coating on them.
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