by Recyclersteve » Thu Aug 29, 2019 12:48 am
One thing I'm doing to weed out some coppers that I really don't want is to look through them all again. What I mean is that I used to basically look at the front to see the date, but didn't really look at the back unless the back side was facing up in the pile. Now I'm going back and finding some that look just fine on the obverse but not acceptable on the reverse.
In fact, I went through a stack of a little over 2,400 coppers (about 2/3 were 1959-1982- the other 1/3 were wheats). I found that I (the new stricter Steve) took about 9% of the coins out of the pile as unacceptable.
To be careful about how I'm doing this, I have added a separate note to those coffee cans where I looked at both sides. The note says "reverses checked carefully". If a can doesn't have that note, then I have more work to do or I sell those coins for a bit less when the time comes.
What do I do with the ones that don't make the grade? If they are wheats, I have a separate can for ugly wheats. If they are 1959 or later, they go back into circulation.
I have I wish I'd been smart enough to indicate which cans back in the day were true hand sorts vs. Ryedale sorts. That sure would have made things easier. Oh well. Live and learn...
Last edited by
Recyclersteve on Thu Sep 12, 2019 4:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Former stock broker w/ ~20 yrs. at one company. Spoke with 100k+ people and traded a lot (long, short, options, margin, extended hours, etc.).
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