Know Common Cents wrote:They're easily recognizable and usually EF to BU, so that makes them more appealing than regular CDN 80%. A high percentage of the CDN silver dimes and quarters I see for sale are dirty, tarnished, scratched or generally ugly. Silver is silver after all, and if one is buying for that purpose only then it's tolerable.
Take a look on eBay. Many sellers have CDN silver bucks listed and are getting some lofty prices for them. I like them...........like them a lot.
jerry278 wrote:Also silver that is 80% pure is obviously going to be more costly to refine than something that is 90% pure.
All in all if you can find it close to spot, most members here would agree its a good deal.
wolvesdad wrote:jerry278 wrote:Also silver that is 80% pure is obviously going to be more costly to refine than something that is 90% pure.
All in all if you can find it close to spot, most members here would agree its a good deal.
I'm not sure that this is correct. Less purity doesn't mean more costly if there is only one other ingredient(Copper).
In fact, to a savy smelter, they would prefer 80% Canadian because then they get 20% copper as a free byproduct that they can then sell for an added profit. Especially with Copper on the rise!
Unlike the war nicks that have multiple ingredients and with the manganese a difficult one to get out.... that does make them more costly to refine.
Dvorak wrote:I think it is a little harder to sell, and you have to watch out for the composition changes in 1967-1968.
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