Question for collectors of wheaties
highvizballs
Posts: 83
Well here is my story/question. I bought 5000 "unsearched"Wheaties from a "Nebraska" hoard sold on ebay. After searching about 4500 of them I found no key dates or semi key dates all in circulated condition. The coins range from the teens to the 50's...lots of them. Is it reasonable for me to expect to find some key or semi keys from a group of 5000 coins that weren't searched?
Thanks in advance and don't mind the giant icon !
Thanks in advance and don't mind the giant icon !
Icon reduced by popular demand. Peer pressure has forced me to conform! I promise towalk in the right direction
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Comments
Byron
My first YOU SUCK on May 6 2005
This kind of purchase is for a newbee who can enjoy the "thrill" of finding all the old dates that are never found in circulation anymore. The bags usually sell for under $200 with shipping and when you are done you get $50 back to roll up and return to the local bank. JMHO. Steve
My Complete PROOF Lincoln Cent with Major Varieties(1909-2015)Set Registry
As a "new numismatist" if you order once.
If you order twice ...
about once every 5-10 years.
Please check out my eBay auctions!
My WLH Short Set Registry Collection
The owner of the local laundromat, from time-to-time would let me and my coin collecting buddy go through bags of several hundred dollars face value silver dimes that he got out of his washing machines and dryers. Why did he allow us to do this? Well, he was sick and tired of us emptying his change machine in our search for dimes for our collections. Did he himself search the coins? No, he didn't but we sure did.
We looked at a lot of coins, my buddy and I did. We searched rolls of pennies from the bank, nickels and dimes from the laundromat, and of course, the change from every spent dollar bill. Some rolls got checked more than once because after we turned the rolls in to the bank in exchange for more rolls there was no guarantee that we wouldn't get already checked rolls in exchange.
The local pharmacist was something of a hero to us. He had found a 1909 SVDB, almost uncirculated condition, in a roll from a bank in Nebraska. My buddy and I were invited to his house to admire his SVDB and admire we did. The year was 1963.
The "Nebraska" hoard has been searched, higvizballs. Some of those Nebraska Lincoln cents you bought could have been checked by the coin collecting, SVDB owning pharmacist I mentioned above.
Oh, and I would be remiss if I failed to mention that if the pharmacist found any semi-key Lincolns such as 12S, 13S, 24 D, etc. you can be certain that he saved them.
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
I made the same mistake you made some months back when i was just getting into this coin-mania. my goal was to fill up the Lincoln cents books from 1909 to date. Only problem was, the five or so key dates are now the only empty slots in my book, and I can't spend the kind of money to fill it! I must have searched ten thousand wheaties, most from ebay, and for the most part I was pretty lucky to find some neat things AND fill the book to where it is today, less five key dates. Don't beat yourself up.
I also bought, before I knew this website existed a ten-pack of Morgans from coin vault. My only consolation to making such a grave error is the fact that it started me on this wild ride of "coinage."
Dont' make that mistake~~whatever you do! Read read read this forum. It's education $$ can't buy!
Good Luck and
Blue skies!
david
-Bochiman
If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving definitely isn't for you.
-unknown
-Bochiman
If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving definitely isn't for you.
-unknown
Just how closely did you search this bag of coins? Did you check the 1917 cents for the double die? Did you check all the 1944-D cents for either two of the D/S varieties?
Most of these Ebay sellers search their coins, but only for the better dates.
Don't get sore and pitch this bunch. Get a book on the Lincoln cent varieties and see what you have there.
Ray
Remember, ebay can be great but it is just like a flea-market. Scummy peope will make a buck any way they can and they don't care who they rip off.
At any rate, welcome to the board and keep reading 'round here...you won't be dissapointed!
Thanks!
By the way, he is the all knowing Oz when it comes to Lincoln Cents. And, LordMarcovan is the all knowing Oz on all things metal detecting (if you're into it). These gentelmen have my deepest respect and admiration.
Welcome aboard.
Positive BST as a seller: Namvet69, Lordmarcovan, Bigjpst, Soldi, mustanggt, CoinHoader, moursund, SufinxHi, al410, JWP
I think there is a warehouse someplace in Hoboken, NJ that has six billion tons of wheaties in a big storage bin (all thoroughly searched) that retailers go to buy up big parcels of wheaties for their ebay auctions.
thanks!
Blue skies!
david
-Bochiman
If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving definitely isn't for you.
-unknown
Just my 2 cents!
buy the books on cents...(i have about 20 different ones) and study!
my experience has been slim but i have scored!
in a bank bag i bought from my credit union ...i found a 1971 doubled die obverse # 1 (pcgs graded it at au-58 red!...(yes RED)
in a bag of "truly UN-SEARCHED WHEATS" i found two 1956-D/D and S dual mint marked coins...
also in the same bag, i found a 1922 plain .........so sometimes the bags may be searched....but not real well...good luck!
and welcome !
That seller wouldn't happen to be "finderskeepers of omaha" would it?
Old Vern has had quite a run on eBay, he has told some mighty good tales along the way as well. I'd guess he is probably into his third year of terminal leukemia with only months to live by now.
If it was him, join the crowd. That bag had been searched several times already, bet on it.
BTW, welcome to the board. There's no better place to learn from on the planet.
John Marnard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920, page 235ff
I'm currently working through what's probably close to a double-bag of wheats, and this batch is about as unsearched as I have ever seen. These coins came from the local coin dealer, and whenever he buys collections with wheats, the wheats go in a bucket. Yes, he'll look through them thoroughly if he thinks there's a reason to do so (he once showed me a 1909-S he pulled from a batch that he did look through), but if it looks to be a waste of time, he doesn't bother. In this particular case he said that I was getting a bunch of small accumulations from a lot of sources, and not a single large origin point. So I agree with the other posters that there's no such thing as an unsearched bag -- but some are more searched than others.
One indication that this is "less searched" is the high percentage of pre-1940 coins. I'd say that they're over 5% of the total. That's very high.
I've also found four 1955-S examples. They're not really worth keeping, but I can't remember finding even one other in a bag, ever. (I'm in Boston, and S-mint examples are pretty uncommon from any year)
That said, I'm about 80% through, and so far this is the best of the batch:
1909 VDB (x2: VG, F)
1910: XF
1911: AU
1928-S: VF
1956-D/D RPM #8: AU
...and 9 other attributable RPMs. And that's about it. In my experience that's pretty much a best-case scenario. You can judge accordingly.
The 1911 in AU (with a hint of luster even) was quite a shocker, let me tell you. I'd love to know the history behind that one. The 1956-D/D #8, by contrast, was *not* a shocker. Even though it has one of the highest premiums of any RPM in the 40s or 50s, that's also at least the 5th example that I've found. I'm not sure if I've found more of any other RPM than that one.
FWIW, if anyone is considering going through bags of wheats, you might want to talk to your local coin dealer. Mine lets me essentially "rent" the bag while I'm going through it. That is, I know that he'll buy them back whenever I'm done with them for a good fraction of what I paid him, minus however many I decide to keep. If nothing else, it answers the question of what to do with the searched bag when you're done with it. I usually figure that the premium to the coins I keep will roughly match my "rental" costs. But that's not really the point, after all -- the fun is in the searching.
jonathan
"hoard" but they were'nt. I'm really glad I found this board. Too bad I didn't come here before I started by
stuff on ebay. Could have avoided being ripped off.
I don't know much about coins, but have been using ebay for years. One tip is to look at the seller's "other auctions." There is one dealer auctioning off some "unsearched" coins "found" in a safe deposit box. He claims not to be a coin dealer and thus does not want to search the coins--but if you look at his other auctions, they are all about coins, some having nothing to do with the original "find," and in the other auctions he uses more technical terms and appears indeed to know quite a bit about coins and relative rarity.
Also, when looking at feedback, sometimes it helps to look at the buyers' other purchases--especially those who leave neutrals or negatives. Someone who is always buying coins would have more reliable feedback than a once-in-while purchaser.
And don't forget to check shipping and handling costs before purchase--sometimes people pad their sales that way (99c or 1c auctions especially).
Regards,
Kelly
Yes, this can be helpful when trying to make a decision about whether to bid or not. Some time ago, I saw an ebay seller, who claimed that he himself was not a collector, selling "Dad's wheat collection." Apparently, "Dad" had been collecting (read that, accumulating) wheats for many years and now the seller was going to sell them by the roll without looking at the coins as he rolled them for the lucky ebay buyers. Well, he had some pics of piles of wheat cents for his auction and it was pretty obvious from the pics that some "steelies" were to be found. Also, the seller remarked in his description that Dad had collected these as well as the other kind of wheats and so it was highly likely that most rolls would have at least one, and maybe more than one, of these.
I checked some of this non-coin collecting seller's ebay purchases and found that a few weeks prior to the auction for "Dad's wheat collection" he had purchased a whole ****load of steelies from another ebayer!
Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.-Albert Einstein
<< <i>Thanks in advance and don't mind the giant icon ! >>
Wow. That IS a giant icon!
I've often wondered how that happens.
Check out "Moon22" in the icon database... 280 X 420 !