Recyclersteve wrote:Lots of people would be taking huge quantities of pennies to their local Coinstar machines.
Lots of people would likely have copper pennies for sale on eBay, but the prices would likely be ridiculous when you factor in freight and eBay seller charges.
It might be interesting if you could find a decent YouTube video showing how Canada handled this since they stopped producing cents in 2012.
Recyclersteve wrote:I am curious about something as I’ve never melted anything and made a bar in my life. How do you sell a bar that is 95% copper and 5% zinc as the Lincoln were up through mid-1982? Or is there a way when melting to separate the copper from the zinc?
JerrySpringer wrote:Recyclersteve wrote:I am curious about something as I’ve never melted anything and made a bar in my life. How do you sell a bar that is 95% copper and 5% zinc as the Lincoln were up through mid-1982? Or is there a way when melting to separate the copper from the zinc?
I don't know if many of us would melt the pennies. I dug up this quote though:
"Copper has a melting point of 1984.32 °F (1084.62 °C), and zinc has a melting point of 787.15 °F (419.53 °C). Because of this stark contrast in melting points, we can heat up a penny, and the zinc will become molten long before the copper does."
Guess a large-scale refiner would throw the coins into a latter stage copper ore line and have the zinc pour out? Have no clue really if it that simple. I understand aqueous and organic liquid dissolution processes and solid precipitations, but when you have mixed metals, it is impressive that a lower-melting metal would neatly liquefy out.
Most cent hoarders would just opt to sell to a refiner. I'd be skeptical of buying a backyard melted 95% Cu brick.
Catfish4u wrote:Those copper pennies should sell for more of a premium! How else are individuals going to invest in physical copper/brass?
DC_Penny_Guy wrote:It is definitely a wonderful time to be ordering penny boxes. My banks are happy to order me as many as I'd like, and I'm rarely getting any uncirculated boxes in my orders. Healthy copper percentages, too. I think people are breaking open their piggy banks. I wonder what the mintage numbers will look like at the end of the year.
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