How would you handle this Accumulation...Update last post
Casman
Posts: 3,935 ✭✭
Let's say you had 27 (5) Gallon Buckets of miscellaneous US coinage collected over the past 12 years. You want to convert to cash?
What would be the quickest way to accomplish that?
Edited for the nit picker..lol...
It was a client question. Thanks for the help.
What would be the quickest way to accomplish that?
Edited for the nit picker..lol...
It was a client question. Thanks for the help.
0
Comments
I would sample a bucket to find out if it was worth it to get the silver out first.
Otherwise I would start by calling a few banks and asking if they could help.
Preferably a bank you have a relationship with. They have coin counter machines
and would probably not charge you if you made an appt (i think).
<< <i>A lot of trips to the coin counter at the credit union. Mine sifts it out as you go just keep checking the reject slot.
>>
does it reject silver coins?
<< <i>
<< <i>A lot of trips to the coin counter at the credit union. Mine sifts it out as you go just keep checking the reject slot.
>>
does it reject silver coins? >>
Most reject silver and I agree with this suggestion.
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
closing the thread. XXXXX
;-)
The Whisker Cheek Collection - Top 50 Peace VAM Registry
Landmark Buffalo Collection
In honor of the memory of Cpl. Michael E. Thompson
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution
This group would be more accurately described as an accumulation.
If the coins were all acquired in the past 12 years, the likelihood of any silver coins occuring is so miniscule that the labor of sorting them might mostly likely not being worth your time.
But if he's just trying to dump them, find a bank that offers free coin counting (usually requires an account). Second best bet would be a Coinstar machine. I've never used one before but I think you can get no fee coin counting if you take a gift card to one of a few retailers instead of cash.
27...........5 gallon ...... buckets!
Thats a lotta stuff to go through but.............I'd begin by separating out the specific denominations into individual buckets 1st.
Then I'd start with the halves and work my way down the different denominations. This would enable the seller to at least pull out all the silver for sale.
Kennedy's and Washington's have some fairly rare varieties in their clad compositions and I for one, would search each and every one.
IF, the owner of said coins simply wanted to turn them in at face value, separating the denominations would make it a bit easier. I think.
I kinda wish I had this problem.
The name is LEE!
I would recommend they hand sort if they want to guarantee that they pick out every piece of silver.
Certainly not the quickest though.
<< <i>The machines do not always reject silver and thus is why people search bags that come off said machines.
I would recommend they hand sort if they want to guarantee that they pick out every piece of silver. >>
Silver looks different enough from clad so you could spread groups of coins on a table and just look at them to see if any silver is visible. It'll be a lot quicker that checking each date.
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
Thanksgiving National Battlefield Coin Show is November 29-30, 2024 at the Eisenhower Allstar Sportsplex, Gettysburg, PA. Tables are available. WWW.AmericasCoinShows.com
<< <i> >>
I read numistmatic books. Sometimes even in the bathroom!
I'll try to get a pic, the guys supposed to be bringing in a bucket.
I empty out my kid's piggie bank every 18 months or so and usually get about $300 worth, all of which fits easily within a 1 gallon ziplock bag. And now I'm thinking, if it's $300 per gallon (actually more) then we're probably talking about a lot more than $5K for the whole lot. Like $40K more!
edited to add: $300 in random change is pretty darn heavy, and quite awkward to carry around.
Empty Nest Collection
Matt’s Mattes
Then I'd bring it in batches, maybe half a bucket and give it a quick search for wheats and silvers either before bringing each batch or as it's fed into the machine.
Being 12 years of change it's not likely to have much silver.
If it was mine I'd search for varieties but I like doing it, if the person has no enjoyment in searching then it's not worth the effort.
Just an idea.
<< <i>Sort through them one by one with a 5x glass, Redbook and Cherrypickers Guide. Nice entertainment for the balance of ones life. >>
Sounds great if your retired and you have a few years left.
that is my advice as well, unless you or someone you know wants to enjoy handling it for a wage of less than what coinstar machines would charge you.
with that much, i'd probably consider skipping the first step and just dumping it in coinstar. What was the person thinking, that such an accumulation would be worth more than face?
it's worth less
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
My buddy brought in a sampling in a 1 pint pail. Good grief...The coins are filthy...
I noticed only a few cents. The majority are quarters, and the rest are dimes and nickels. The coins were all recovered from the car masher. Quite a few are bent and mangled up and extremely dirty covered in gunk.
In 5 mintues of tilting the pail I pulled 4 Silver roosies, 2 merc's, a 2000 sac, a New Hampshire DOT token, and the rest, well, it's a mess and I was wearing a suit.
Doesn't look like coin stars gonna work with the bent stuff. The counts up to 42 (5) gallon buckets. The owner wants to convert to cash asap and said he'd split 50/50 with my buddy.
I said I'd help, but they gotta clean it up first. With that said, What's the easiest way to clean off a massive amount of coins? Soap and water? Dollar car wash power sprayer?
I'll try to upload some pics tomorrow for entertainment.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
<< <i>Why waste a good hunt? Get hooked up with the local school and tell them you have a cirriculum called numismatics. Take a bucket each week and have the students sort , search, stack and roll or flip them. The more they study, the more they'll learn the value of money beyond what's just at face.
Just an idea. >>
Not that it's a bad idea in theory, but my sense of human nature is that you'd lose a significant % off the top in this scenario.
<< <i>run 'em through a sifter with soapy water in a way like a gold panner would do...... >>
Thanks, I'll give that a try and upload some pics tomorrow night.
My buddy was gonna take them to the coin laundry but I told him that wasn't for that...I gotta imagine they'd be a little pissed if he threw a 5 gallon bucket in there.
What's the best way to straighten the bent ones? Sledge Hammer? Keep in mind there's likely over 100,000 coins to straighten.
Geez, I can't believe I'm asking these questions.
I used to be famous now I just collect coins.
Link to My Registry Set.
https://pcgs.com/setregistry/quarters/washington-quarters-specialty-sets/washington-quarters-complete-variety-set-circulation-strikes-1932-1964/publishedset/78469
Varieties Are The Spice Of LIFE and Thanks to Those who teach us what to search For.
PDF link from the US Mint website with instructions on how to redeem mutilated coins.
edited to add... I'd imagine trying to straighten out bent coins reliably enough to not jam up a counting machine would be extremely time consuming and hardly worth the effort.
<< <i>Update:
Quite a few are bent and mangled up and extremely dirty covered in gunk.
>>
I'd try an experiment with a solvent product type such as this, soak it in a solvent for a long period of time, rinse with soap and water, final rinse of just water. Srsly. Try it on a small batch. See what happens. Can't hurt to try.
<< <i>How much do you suppose it'll cost to buy enough solvent to clean 100,000 coins? What do you do with the solvent afterwards? And even if it does work, you're left with 100,000 clean, bent coins. >>
A. Don't know, 55 gallon drum might get it done. B. Recycle it. C. I don't think they are all bent. D. Was just an idea, sounds like a bad one. Oh well.
type2,CCHunter.
<< <i>C. I don't think they are all bent. >>
No- only about 100,000 of them:
"Keep in mind there's likely over 100,000 coins to straighten."
<< <i>
<< <i>C. I don't think they are all bent. >>
No- only about 100,000 of them:
"Keep in mind there's likely over 100,000 coins to straighten." >>
D. Was just an idea, sounds like a bad one. Oh well.
The federal minimum wage is $7.25. In order to make that much straightening coins, you'd have to be able to do 29 quarters in an hour- two minutes each- reliably enough to run through a counting machine without getting rejected or jamming the machine. And that's assuming you got the coins free of charge and they didn't need any other type of processing- like cleaning. Is that possible? I don't think I'd want to try to find out.
And when you finally run out of quarters and dimes, you'll need to be able to straighten 145 nickels an hour to maintain your pay rate...
<< <i>Not trying to give anyone a hard time over this, but another consideration...
The federal minimum wage is $7.25. In order to make that much straightening coins, you'd have to be able to do 29 quarters in an hour- two minutes each- reliably enough to run through a counting machine without getting rejected or jamming the machine. And that's assuming you got the coins free of charge and they didn't need any other type of processing- like cleaning. Is that possible? I don't think I'd want to try to find out.
And when you finally run out of quarters and dimes, you'll need to be able to straighten 145 nickels an hour to maintain your pay rate... >>
Most of us here have probably worked for less at sometime and OP said he found silver and a token in a small sample that sounds like there would be more then minimum wage at the end of this and possible a cool treasure search. Metal detectorists spend way more time and come up with way less.
type2,CCHunter.
If I was in your situation, I would go back and explain that after some investigation it would not be worth your time unless your take is 75% or you will have to move on. It will be an unbelievable amount of work.
When I was younger I worked in a salvage yard and there is a reason no one took the coins out of the bottom of the crusher.
<< <i>Update:
My buddy brought in a sampling in a 1 pint pail. Good grief...The coins are filthy...
I noticed only a few cents. The majority are quarters, and the rest are dimes and nickels. The coins were all recovered from the car masher. Quite a few are bent and mangled up and extremely dirty covered in gunk.
In 5 mintues of tilting the pail I pulled 4 Silver roosies, 2 merc's, a 2000 sac, a New Hampshire DOT token, and the rest, well, it's a mess and I was wearing a suit.
Doesn't look like coin stars gonna work with the bent stuff. The counts up to 42 (5) gallon buckets. The owner wants to convert to cash asap and said he'd split 50/50 with my buddy.
I said I'd help, but they gotta clean it up first. With that said, What's the easiest way to clean off a massive amount of coins? Soap and water? Dollar car wash power sprayer?
I'll try to upload some pics tomorrow for entertainment. >>
wow, this new development makes it an even worse situation than if they were normal change, however the chance at silver sweetens it a little bit.
Maybe consider bagging it up by the pound or two and selling the bags "unsearched" on ebay with the story of their origin.
If you're set on cleaning them up and mining them, consider renting one of those portable cement mixers that will mix a bag or two of concrete, and cleaning them by the bucket with some water and detergent/degreaser by tumbling them for a while, then spread them out on a tarp, hose them off, and scan for silver, dollar coins, anything of value.
then cull all the worst of the mangled coins and those that are still sticky, and run the rest through a Coinstar, which will kick out most of the silver and foreign, but take most of the wheat cents.
No matter what, sounds like a tremendous amount of work for even one 5 gallon bucket of this mess, never mind 42 of them. The bent coins are going to be more trouble than they're worth
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
A total of 7 Silver dimes, found 1 more dated 1952.
$37 Dollars in quarters
$33.40 in dimes
1 Sacajawea Dollar
1 Half Dollar
$1.25 in Nickles
6 Lincoln cents.
approx 25 tokens and a few foreign coins.
I'm gonna recommend they seperate the coins and make a trip to PA.
<< <i>I'm gonna recommend they seperate the coins and make a trip to PA. >>
Good recommendation.
Keeper of the VAM Catalog • Professional Coin Imaging • Prime Number Set • World Coins in Early America • British Trade Dollars • Variety Attribution