@DBSTrader2 said:
Surprised so many of the same "W" in single roll. Weren't they supposed to be mixed better into the general population to make them scarcer to find?
In 2019 they didn't really know how to mix them, several rolls had multiple W's, in 2020 they got better...> @JWP said:
@JWP said:
Found these 3 war nickels today while searching 50 rolls of nickels.
1943-P, 1943-S, & 1945-S
They look like they’ve been in a war. Or freshly pulled from the pocket of a grease monkey at the local Phillips 66.
Nice finds now clean your coins 😛
You know that cleaning coins is not acceptable. If I send them to be graded, they will come back as detail - cleaned coins. Ha Ha
@JWP I found some clean ones today that you may like. PM me your shipping address and I will get them out for you.
The only catch, if you find something cool or worth more than melt you must post it here.
Have a good evening!
From the till at the CU—first-day Jefferson two-dollar bill postmarked April 13, 1976—not a pretty one though. Others have a nice bicentennial stamp in the upper right with a more distinctive mark. My interesting finds come flawed. Doughnuts for tellers next week—one teller, on vacation, holds some more dollars for me. (Fresh doughnuts cost me $1.50 each, no discount for quantity).
I saw something I considered odd today at my local credit union. Lady at the next teller down had a plastic bag full of dime rolls. She would hand each roll to the teller, the teller opened the roll, removed all the coins then counted them, one by one as she put them back into the rolls. Have people been cheating so much that customers are no longer trusted to turn in the right number of coins in a roll?
In the future, should I, when asking for customer rolled coins, open each roll in front of the cashier to make sure I'm getting the correct number of coins in each roll?
The amount of time it was taking the teller to go through each roll was causing a pretty significant back up of folks waiting their turns to do their transactions.
I have been shorted on customer wrapped rolls and also om OBW rolls from Loomis. It happens when the rolls are filled with trach coins and tokens. You can always take the coin wrapper and the trach items in the roll back to the bank/CU. They might refund you the missing coins. Some institutions' refuse to take coin rolls from customers for this reason also. It basically comes down to how much you want to chance by getting coin rolls from th bank or CU. Overall, my experience has been a mixed bag, but i will still get the coin rolls when I have the opportunity.
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
@Klif50 said:
I saw something I considered odd today at my local credit union. Lady at the next teller down had a plastic bag full of dime rolls. She would hand each roll to the teller, the teller opened the roll, removed all the coins then counted them, one by one as she put them back into the rolls. Have people been cheating so much that customers are no longer trusted to turn in the right number of coins in a roll?
In the future, should I, when asking for customer rolled coins, open each roll in front of the cashier to make sure I'm getting the correct number of coins in each roll?
The amount of time it was taking the teller to go through each roll was causing a pretty significant back up of folks waiting their turns to do their transactions.
I've seen similar situations where the teller was removing the cents to count them before selling them to me.
It was a buzz kill as she sled them across her desk. After all I was looking for high grades not a 69 S.
Comments
Found these 3 war nickels today while searching 50 rolls of nickels.
1943-P, 1943-S, & 1945-S
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
They look like they’ve been in a war. Or freshly pulled from the pocket of a grease monkey at the local Phillips 66.
Nice finds now clean your coins 😛
You know that cleaning coins is not acceptable. If I send them to be graded, they will come back as detail - cleaned coins. Ha Ha
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
Yea but at least they'll be clean
When I first started I cleaned a few of these with brasso and they cleaned up really nice had a shiny blue silvery look too.
In 2019 they didn't really know how to mix them, several rolls had multiple W's, in 2020 they got better...> @JWP said:
No one would send those coins in for grading, clean and give to your grandkids...
@JWP I found some clean ones today that you may like. PM me your shipping address and I will get them out for you.
The only catch, if you find something cool or worth more than melt you must post it here.
Have a good evening!
From the till at the CU—first-day Jefferson two-dollar bill postmarked April 13, 1976—not a pretty one though. Others have a nice bicentennial stamp in the upper right with a more distinctive mark. My interesting finds come flawed. Doughnuts for tellers next week—one teller, on vacation, holds some more dollars for me. (Fresh doughnuts cost me $1.50 each, no discount for quantity).
Found this 1954 D dime searching 50 OBW rolls.
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
I saw something I considered odd today at my local credit union. Lady at the next teller down had a plastic bag full of dime rolls. She would hand each roll to the teller, the teller opened the roll, removed all the coins then counted them, one by one as she put them back into the rolls. Have people been cheating so much that customers are no longer trusted to turn in the right number of coins in a roll?
In the future, should I, when asking for customer rolled coins, open each roll in front of the cashier to make sure I'm getting the correct number of coins in each roll?
The amount of time it was taking the teller to go through each roll was causing a pretty significant back up of folks waiting their turns to do their transactions.
I have been shorted on customer wrapped rolls and also om OBW rolls from Loomis. It happens when the rolls are filled with trach coins and tokens. You can always take the coin wrapper and the trach items in the roll back to the bank/CU. They might refund you the missing coins. Some institutions' refuse to take coin rolls from customers for this reason also. It basically comes down to how much you want to chance by getting coin rolls from th bank or CU. Overall, my experience has been a mixed bag, but i will still get the coin rolls when I have the opportunity.
USN & USAF retired 1971-1993
Successful Transactions with more than 100 Members
I've seen similar situations where the teller was removing the cents to count them before selling them to me.
It was a buzz kill as she sled them across her desk. After all I was looking for high grades not a 69 S.
From two customer rolls at the CU,