COIN SHOP VISITS - CONSTITUTIONAL SILVER - HALVES, QUARTERS, DIMES - 20181211

in #steemsilvergold6 years ago

COIN SHOP VISITS - CONSTITUTIONAL SILVER - HALVES, QUARTERS, DIMES

Coin Shop Visit

This week's visit to the Coin Shop yielded a Stack of Constitutional Silver.

Here's the Stack of U.S. Halves, Quarters, and Dimes

Constitutional Silver is 90% Silver coins, also known as Junk Silver.

@GoldKey Tip for the Day - Buy Constitutional Silver

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Two Half Dollars

  • One Walking Liberty Half Dollar and One Franklin Half Dollar

https://steemit.com/steemsilvergold/@goldkey/coin-shop-visits-constitutional-silver-half-dollars-20181208

GK_CSQ_ConstSilver_Ver02_00.jpg

Four Washington Quarter Dollars

  • Four Washington Quarter Dollars

https://steemit.com/steemsilvergold/@goldkey/coin-shop-visits-constitutional-silver-quarter-dollars-20181209

GK_CSQ_ConstSilver_Ver03_00.jpg

Ten Dimes

  • Five Mercury Dimes / Five Roosevelt Dimes

https://steemit.com/steemsilvergold/@goldkey/coin-shop-visits-constitutional-silver-dimes-20181210

GK_CSQ_ConstSilver_Ver04_00.jpg

@GoldKey Tip for the Day - Buy Constitutional Silver.

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Love the old Constitutional silver!

I love Constitutional Silver also. I am glad to get nice coins. Sometimes it is like a lottery / scratch off ticket. I get home and look at the coins to see if there is a valuable date / mint mark.

My eyes always Zoom In, on all U.S. Silver Coins... It reminds me of the time I was Window Shopping in Prague, and my eyes Zoomed in on a 1913 Five Dollar U.S Gold Coin... I went inside to ask how much... She said $182, so I bought it... I think it’s worth $60,000 now...

I would love to see your collection if the 1913 Five Dollar Gold Coin is still there.

There is so much about your comments that spark my interest and yet confuse me.

You have such knowledge about VALUABLE old coins and comment that you own very valuable coins. You must have an awesome collection.
Yet, your PC Theory claims the VALUE will be in coins with no precious metal content.
Also, your Coin Man has grown to be big. However, if you have such wealth to possess the awesome collection, then I expect Coin Man would be HUGE. HUGE. HUGE. HUGE.

Someday, I hope you reach out further than here on steemit.

You obviously have knowledge and history.

Thanks for this comment and story.

Yes... I still have the 1913 Five Dollar Gold Piece... Naturally, the Five Dollar Gold Coin will be more Valuable than Five Dollars in Nickels... I never Rule out the Precious Metal Content, or Collector Value of U.S. Coinage... I once paid $50 for a 1926-S Wheat Back Penny... Anyway, if you compare 100 Nickels one can obtain for Five Dollars and do the Math, a person "after" the Reset will be able to Buy a One Ounce Silver Round or Bar for 3 Nickels each... So, for Five Dollars in Nickels, one could purchase around 33 Ounces of .999 Fine Silver Rounds or Bars... If you held onto the Five Dollar Bill, after the Reset, you'll only be able to buy 1/3 of an Ounce of Silver... You may also look at the reset this way... Three Copper Coated, Zinc Pennies (after the Reset) will buy you a Pound of Pure Copper... At Present, it costs about Three "Paper" One Dollar "Bills" to buy a Pound of Pure Copper... The Point I always try to bring out about the Reset, is that the Common Clad Coinage will be the Least Expensive way to get your hands on U.S. Crypto-Dollars and Cents, or the New U.S. Paper Trade Dollars and Cents... For 1,500 Dollars you have the Choice to buy a One Ounce Bar or Round of Gold or 1,500 U.S. Dollar Coins... After the Reset, you'll be able to Cash in your One Ounce Round or Bar of Gold for 15 U.S. Crypto-Dollars... If you happen to have 1,500 One Dollar U.S. Coins, you can Cash them in for 1,500 U.S. Crypto Dollars... Always feel free to question any one of my 777 Posts... I was into Gold and Silver, long before I ever came up with my P.C. Theory... Now, I’m sitting on the Best of Both Worlds...

I still have a bunch of those. Why is it called junk silver?

I have a bunch too. Some of mine are better dates or mint marks, so I keep those separate from the rest. The "Junk Silver" term refers to the 'collectible' aspect. If the coin silver value is more than collectible value, then all its value is based on silver content, so there is NO collectible value, so Junk Silver: only value is in the silver content.

thanks for the explanation