henrysmedford wrote:My son Franklin is filling out a Whitman folder for the Canadian nickels see http://www.realcent.org/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=8528 and the ones that he is missing cost more than the metal.
1926 Far 6 $150+
1951 High Relief $500+
1953 No Shoulder strap near leaf $800+
1953 with shoulder strap far leaf $400+
My best thought on what they will cost.
TXBullion wrote:About 9,250 tons that would be right? A lot has been pulled and scrapped already. 5% are current percentages from what I understand. I would guess there are only a few thousand tons from hoards and still in circulation. Probably less.
frugalcanuck wrote:TXBullion wrote:About 9,250 tons that would be right? A lot has been pulled and scrapped already. 5% are current percentages from what I understand. I would guess there are only a few thousand tons from hoards and still in circulation. Probably less.
That whole post makes me sad
Robarons wrote:Is there any quick comparison between total mintages of Jefferson nickel (bar the war years)?
creshka46 wrote:So I was thinking about the .999 pre'81 nickels and I thought it might be worth knowing how many were ever produced. I only checked on George VI and Elizabeth as I figured that anything earlier than that is more numismatic than bullion. So here it is:
1937-1952 George VI- less than 150 million
1953-1981 Elizabeth II- less than 1.7 billion
In total, that's less than 1.85 billion nickels. Thats only 55 nickels per Canadian or 6 nickels per American!
I wonder if some day soon these may trade more like wheat pennies, disassociated from their metal value.
Anyone have any thoughts?
mtalbot_ca wrote:creshka46 wrote:So I was thinking about the .999 pre'81 nickels and I thought it might be worth knowing how many were ever produced. I only checked on George VI and Elizabeth as I figured that anything earlier than that is more numismatic than bullion. So here it is:
1937-1952 George VI- less than 150 million
1953-1981 Elizabeth II- less than 1.7 billion
In total, that's less than 1.85 billion nickels. Thats only 55 nickels per Canadian or 6 nickels per American!
I wonder if some day soon these may trade more like wheat pennies, disassociated from their metal value.
Anyone have any thoughts?
Hi there,
I remember calculating that there were approx 3,85 billions canadian nickels produced between 1982 and now for a total of 5.7 billions nickel in circulation today. If I only find roughly 10% of the 1952-1981 vintage .999 in circulation, it means that of the 1,85 billions .999 nickels initially produced, there remains to be captured about 570 millions, or about 30-31% of the initial amount; so 570 000 000 nickels or 5,700 tons (not metric).
Does this seem right....
Thanks,
henrysmedford wrote:My son Franklin is filling out a Whitman folder for the Canadian nickels see http://www.realcent.org/viewtopic.php?f=30&t=8528 and the ones that he is missing cost more than the metal.
1926 Far 6 $150+
1951 High Relief $500+
1953 No Shoulder strap near leaf $800+
1953 with shoulder strap far leaf $400+
My best thought on what they will cost.
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