I mailed a Double Eagle in plain white envelope today.
commoncents123
Posts: 2,648 ✭
A few of you may vaguely remember when I mailed the $300 bust half in the plain white envelope a while back; Now I've really gone out on a limb and mailed a double eagle to my dad in a regular business envelope. In this case it's an ex jewelry piece so protecting condition didn't matter. All it took was a forever stamp plus 17. I would never, repeat never mail something of this value, this way to someone I was actually selling something to as opposed to "storing" (my dad stores my bullion). It's no more risky that putting all the bells and whistles on the package so long as you implicitly trust the receiving end.
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To much of a chance to take
Its still an ounce of gold...
<< <i>Why didnt you use one of the dirt cheap bubblers? Its still an ounce of gold... >>
Then it's over 1/4" thick and the price goes up a buck. Also, when you're in the "just over 1/4" range then they sometimes try to send it through the sorter and it greatly increases the chance of it getting caught and damaged. I have that problem sometimes with a single slab in a bubble mailer. --jerry
<< <i>It's no more risky that putting all the bells and whistles on the package so long as you implicitly trust the receiving end. >>
Well, I'm sure you trust yourself and the receiving end, it's the many people that handle your package between the two that should worry you. Good luck.
<< <i>Why didnt you use one of the dirt cheap bubblers?
Its still an ounce of gold... >>
Because he's trying to make a point.
Hopefully the coin will make it to your Dad but if not, oh well, point made.
BTW, Terry Kath from the group Chicago played Russian Roulette until the day he lost. Point Made as "Don't worry, it's not loaded" were his last words.
The name is LEE!
Now I've really gone out on a limb
and
It's no more risky than....
Which was your action: going out on a limb, or non-risky?
<< <i>It will make it... How many of you have ever actually had a letter lost in the mail, or arrive mangled? Not very often. >>
In the same regards, how often have you sent a thick chunk of heavy metal in a plain envelope? There is a PHYSICAL difference between a nicely folded flat letter and a chunk of heavy metal you know! Envelopes can and do rip on occasion, even with just paper inside.
Do you get some pleasure from this?
Yes, it does happen, lots. I have received birthday cards with peek-a-boo razor slits along the edge.
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
<< <i>It will make it... How many of you have ever actually had a letter lost in the mail, or arrive mangled? Not very often. >>
True, but it does happen.
Just not everytime.
Wanna Play a Game??
The name is LEE!
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
<< <i>Meanwhile, I see his offerings on the BST and I think, "Would I buy from this guy?" >>
Oh I'd buy from him with no problems at all.
The name is LEE!
For your next project, let's try making ice. It can be a bit of a challenge.
And a cheap one at that.
Somehow I doubt they did.
Sounds like a play for attention and/or an attempt to start a flamefest.
RIP Mom- 1932-2012
<< <i>I do not believe the OP truly mailed a $1000 gold coin in this fashion. He is only trying to get reactions to, what I would believe, to be a foolish venture. >>
One would hope.
RIP Mom- 1932-2012
It arrived, but...
The weight of the coin was such that it had almost ripped it's own hole in the envelope by the time it arrived.
I almost want to make a parody thread, but i'll leave it at this:
I mailed a 1901-S quarter in a first class envelope to ICG and never got it back. My question is, was the coin AT?
<< <i>It will make it... How many of you have ever actually had a letter lost in the mail, or arrive mangled? Not very often. >>
How about 2 letters lost in 3 weeks, another mangled that contained an item just thicker than a PCGS holder ..It is your coin , one of these days it will take a bite out of you
I complained to the local postman and he recovered them. He had found them loose in his bag and gave them to somebody else getting Canadian mail.
Well, just Love coins, period.
One day you might loose...you know that, right?
I knew it would happen.
<< <i>Somehow, the term "penny wise and pound foolish" comes to mind. >>
<< <i> >>
Good one!
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
<< <i>HELLO NEUMAN!! >>
Don't forget Cliff Claven from Cheers.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>till that fat enevlope gets caught in the sorting machine and "poof" goes your coin.
To much of a chance to take >>
When this happens it will also damage a few letters with it.
edited to add: my coin was really small, abut the size of a seated dime.
good memory Dennis, yes he did
www.brunkauctions.com
<< <i>We should know something by Friday, I would think....maybe tomorrow. BTW, I used a small piece of white duck tape to paste the raw coin (no holder) to an ordinary piece of paper, and then used 4 more pieces of paper to thicken it a little...that's it. Remember this was a jewelry piece and is just bullion. >>
yep... just a measly grand...a pittance...
hope your faith in good fortune turns out OK...
<< <i>It will make it... How many of you have ever actually had a letter lost in the mail, or arrive mangled? Not very often. >>
I like your style, man!
<< <i>What are you going to do when the coin is stolen? >>
I wish the mail man would steal my electric bill - it's a quarter inch thick and seems like it's worth a grand to our local provider SMUD.
<< <i>What are you going to do when the coin is stolen? >>
There is nothing I can do, I will be out of a grand. Once again, when I sell a coin I either use rip-proof bubble mailers or those neato Priority boxes the post offices gives away. This is only for someone who I implicitly trust and owe nothing to regarding the coin being mailed (as the coin is still mine, it's my risk to take).
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So who gets the money? The P.O. or the recipient?
Franklin-Lover's Forum
<< <i>
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So who gets the money? The P.O. or the recipient? >>
Neither. The money will be cancelled and returned to sender since it is probably over one ounce. Taping on an extra quarter (or whatever it was at the time) might have worked..
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
So, would these coins be "cancelled" so they couldn't be used again?