centavosdecobre wrote:On the topic of mint errors, has anyone found any 1983 coppers? Do they even exist? If so, do they have the "light" letters/numbers like some 1982´s, or do they have the "heavy" (or bold) letters/numbers like the other 1982´s? Is there something about them that a hand-sorter would notice before heaving them into the zinc pile?
hejira11 wrote:New here as well. I'm finding that the hoard gets very heavy if you don't develope a manageable weight/size amount to break up into in advance.
hejira11 wrote:New here as well. I'm finding that the hoard gets very heavy if you don't develope a manageable weight/size amount to break up into in advance.
shinnosuke wrote:I really wish there was a video on YouTube of that jug of coins rolling down the stairs and into the wall with another smaller image of your face inserted into the corner of the screen showing your simultaneous reaction to the scene unfolding before your eyes.
frugi wrote:shinnosuke wrote:I really wish there was a video on YouTube of that jug of coins rolling down the stairs and into the wall with another smaller image of your face inserted into the corner of the screen showing your simultaneous reaction to the scene unfolding before your eyes.
yeah. me too. it would have been priceless. Either way it was a 4 unit complex in a complex of probably 500 units total. I lived in my apartment for 6 years and had pets. I destroyed my glass sliding doors to the balcony, I destroyed the mirrored sliding doors on my closets, I burned a huge hole in the balcony floor, I destroyed the dishwasher, and left several large items of furniture, and believe it or not, I got 100% of my deposit back including my pet deposit, WTF!, and nobody said anything about the whole in the wall. I was completely floored two weeks later when I received a check in the mail for $1400.00 from the complex, I was like Holy Sh*t. Un-be-freaking-lieveable.
moneydog wrote:sorted a penny 1973 with John F Kennedys head on it what is it
frugi wrote:moneydog wrote:sorted a penny 1973 with John F Kennedys head on it what is it
it is a counterstamped coin. Technically, a altered coin. Technically, illegal to spend as a cent. Who would want to anyway since it is copper? These were engraved/stamped onto millions of Lincoln cents to honor John F. Kennedy. I believe these are on a vartiety of years of cents. It was done by a 3rd party, in nor relation to the US Mint. These were counterstamped as a gimmick, usually given away in the mail or at carnivals, or coin shows. Could be worth up to $1.00 if in BU condition, might take you a few years until the right person needs it for the JFK collection or whatever. It is definitely worth $0.01, which is more than I can say for the current circulation zinckers.
Corsair wrote:Frugi, I don't think those JFK cents are illegal to spend. Since the alteration did not change the apparent value of the coin, and no intent to defraud anyone was committed, it should still be legal tender. Not too sure about that, but it's really no different than the "Where's George?" people, and that's perfectly legal.
Cu Penny Hoarder wrote:All the talk about altering coins brought this childhood memory back:
When I was a kid in the early 70's my friends older brother used to symetrically/carefully cut the rims off pennies down to the size of a dime. He cut 100's of them like this. Then he put them into dime rolls and cashed them in at the local bank. $5 bucks for 0.50 cents worth of defaced pennies. I don't think he ever got caught either. He was a big-time pot head and he had a very carefree attitude.
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