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How much is a 1960-D sm date roll worth?...Pic added

roll of 1960-D small date Lincolns still sealed in a bank roll since 1960 worth?

Are these original federal reserve rolls?

image

Thanks,
Randy

Comments

  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭


    << <i>Did the mint ship them in rolls or bags? >>



    The mint shipped them in bags and they were rolled by the Federal Reserve banks for distribution to the rest of the banking system.

    Russ, NCNE
  • tsacchtsacch Posts: 2,929 ✭✭✭
    50 X the price of the individual coin plus 10-20% in my guess...........but thats after i have had three 7.3% Molson XXX beers and a good cuban cigar.
    Family, kids, coins, sports (playing not watching), jet skiing, wakeboarding, Big Air....no one ever got hurt in the air....its the sudden stop that hurts. I hate Hurricane Sandy. I hate FEMA and i hate the blasted insurance companies.
  • nwcsnwcs Posts: 13,386 ✭✭✭
    Don't know about small date but a regular one is about $2.
  • merz2merz2 Posts: 2,474
    C4C
    Russ is quite right.The funny thing is the 1960-D small date is the more common of the two.As to value I'd guess it to be about $3. The large date would be more valueable.
    Edited value.Sorry fingers faster than brain.image
    Don
    Registry 1909-1958 Proof Lincolns
  • Crazy4CoinsCrazy4Coins Posts: 1,922 ✭✭✭
    If they were still in there original Federal Reserve bank rolls, I would assume there is a potential for containing higher grade coins, am I correct?

    Randy
  • RussRuss Posts: 48,514 ✭✭✭


    << <i>If they were still in there original Federal Reserve bank rolls, I would assume there is a potential for containing higher grade coins, am I correct? >>



    You can assume they haven't been cherrypicked. As to potential for high grades, odds are pretty slim. The mint beat the crap out of the coins during that period.

    Russ, NCNE


  • << <i>50 X the price of the individual coin plus 10-20% in my guess...........but thats after i have had three 7.3% Molson XXX beers and a good cuban cigar. >>


    This is the right way to price coins.image
  • merz2merz2 Posts: 2,474
    Russ is right again.Chances are slim but possible.
    Don
    Registry 1909-1958 Proof Lincolns
  • Rolls of 60-d large date are more common and are like $1.50 or $2.00. Rolls of 60-d small date I think are more like $5 or $8. I owned a few, and opened them, and what Russ said is correct. If you would like to sell one or a few, I would gladly take another shot at trying to find something nice. image
  • Crazy4CoinsCrazy4Coins Posts: 1,922 ✭✭✭
    What about the overdate variety? Small over large...How common are they?
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,636 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The '60-D sm dt is distressingly common. People saved huge numbers of
    these because they were a small fraction of the mintage of '60-D cents.
    They're pocket change unless they're high grade or one of the many var-
    ieties for the date. Wholesale is 80c per roll but there are no buyers and
    shipping them eats up all the premium over face even in quantity.

    Almost every single pre-1999 cent is worth more.
    Tempus fugit.


  • << <i>...there are no buyers... >>

    Not no buyers image Really only .80 in greysheet? That's so cheap. Why did 60-p small date turn out so much rarer than 60-d?
  • dorkkarldorkkarl Posts: 12,691 ✭✭✭
    rolls of cents from 1959 to about 1964 are insanely common. i doubt you could get even $2 per roll in typical market channels.

    K S
  • Graysheet has them under a $1. As far as quality is concerned I tend to find better coins from tubes. But atleast when buying bank wrapped rolls you can be pretty sure they are not searched. This date on e-bay normally sellls for $2 plus. In bank wrappers unopened
    they can go for much more. I would say average about$3.50 to $4.00. But sometimes going as high as ten. This haveing something to do with the sm over lg variety.
    If interested in selling. I would offer $2.50 shipped too me. Or sell them on ebay for 10%.

    What ever your aim is, good luck Chris
  • I sold in the early 60's (10) rolls from circulation @ $4.50 a roll, and purchased the 1st 1914-D that I ever owned. Still have today. VG-F. Very common back then in circulation.
  • coppercoinscoppercoins Posts: 6,084 ✭✭✭
    1960D small date cents are VERY common and sell for less than a dollar a roll. Being bank wrapped makes little difference in their value - maybe $1.25.

    If I could take the individual coin value of each of my rolls and multiply by 50 and actually get that for the rolls, I'd be very rich. I just bought seven mint sealed bags of Lincolns from 1966-1974 for half of CDN bid. Using the multiplication method they would be worth more than 100 times what I bought them for. I doubt it...

    As for individual 1960D small date cents, it takes an MS66 for them to be worth anything more than a cent each, and it takes an MS67 to have a valuable coin. This is valuation by grade.

    There are a number of rather minor RPMs known for 1960D small date, as well as a single minor doubled die obverse. None of them usually bring more than $5-$10 per coin. One die variety that is often packaged with small date cents and is quite valuable is the 1960D-1DO-001/1960D-1MM-100 combination that shows a small date over a large date plus a nice RPM. These generally sell for over $100 in BU, but are exceedingly difficult to find.
    C. D. Daughtrey, NLG
    The Lincoln cent store:
    http://www.lincolncent.com

    My numismatic art work:
    http://www.cdaughtrey.com
    USAF veteran, 1986-1996 :: support our troops - the American way.
    image

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