Cladking, I follow your entries and threads with great interest, for obvious reasons! Have to put a plug in for Ikes and even SBAs, especially the interesting varieties and toned specimens. May have yet to really catch on but I agree that interest is building thanks to you and DRGolan and James Sego and Gary Hoop and Charlie Pucket and all the other guys and gals who have found these clad coins interesting, attractive, and a challenge to obtain or make in high grade. Rob
Modern dollars are like children - before you know it they'll be all grown up.....
I voted "None" but I posted to show support for those who do collect moderns. My stance has less to do with what I perceive as investment and more to do with my interests. Truly, there are more US coin series that I have no interest in than there are series that I do have an active interest in.
My goal is to complete a set of all denominations in circulation, so that would be all of those minus IKES, but occasionally the banks get some they are willing to part with.
Then I have all of the State Q clad proof sets, and my birth year.
I search new rolls regularly and will pull nicer coins and keep them.
I then put them into envelopes and after several years many have developed a nice tone to them. I keep them in my glove box in my car. The change in heat cold and humidity seems to tone the coins a bit faster then otherwise. I don't think the toning looks any different than any of the older buffalo nickels I've seen in holders. The metal composition is pretty close too.
The come for face value, so they are easy to collect. Sort of like keeping the change jar in an album. Certainly not an important part of my collection, but a part.
Collector and Researcher of Liberty Head Nickels. ANA LM-6053
I voted two or more............ I'm a modern type of guy........................... The oldest proofs I have are 1955....... Trying to get to my birth year of 1950...............
Yes, clad is what brought me back to the hobby and I collect several series of them, mostly from rolls and pocket change. However, the new clad is what rekindled my intrest in coins and has caused me to presue a MS set of Peace dollars. This whould not have happened without the clad coin changes of late.
I have the Shadow Angel registry set for Kennedy Halves
I am also putting together a set of DCAM and MS67 State Quarters. It is a fun set. Don't really know if it will ever be worth anything but I just love the coins and the history!
Honestly, if it was produced by the U.S. Mint, I've been known to collect it. Surprisingly, I just figured yesterday that I currently have at least one $25 mint sewn bag of statehood quarters since the inception, along with US Mint rolls of each state, to include both minting facilities. It is quite a sickness. To date, not counting ikes, kennedy or any other "clad" coinage............... I have over $3,000.00 (face value, not mint costs) just in these stupid state quarters, with fifteen states yet to go !
Yep, I do - I like them raw, and as "gemmy" as I can get them, for a typical raw price (i.e., priced as common stuff by dealers who make no differentiation in price between, say, a truly gemmy '85-P quarter, and the same date, but with a milkspot on it.)
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
Clad Kennedies, strictly from circulation. I've found some neat die varieties, as well as cool end roll toners, coins that have obviously spent most of their 30+ years coloring up in somebody's album, circulated proofs, 2003 and 1987 coins made only for collectors, as well as scads and scads of clad silver ones. It's something to do...
I collect a clad Proof set every year, and I've been keeping up with a Proof example of each of the modern commemoratives. I also have a Roosevelt dime set, although I've been neglecting that lately.
Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
Thanks to you Cladking and to the fact that as a collecting kid from age 7 to about 22 (1963 through 1978) living in Denver I pulled out UNC coins from pocket change each year and stuck them in Whitman Albums (which then went into storage for about 25 years) my response is a resounding yes.
I like the clad washington quarters (65-98) more than other clads and hope one day to show off the Dansco album of 1932-1998 quarters I am assembling. Some of the clads are PQ wildly toned stunners, both MS Circulation strikes and Proofs.
The best part of collecting clads is that for the most part they are cheap, cheap, cheap (especially the raw coins) and most people do not care about them (so that those who do can pick out the cherries and leave everyone else the dogs).
<< <i>I voted "None" but I posted to show support for those who do collect moderns. My stance has less to do with what I perceive as investment and more to do with my interests. Truly, there are more US coin series that I have no interest in than there are series that I do have an active interest in. >>
Yea, verily.
I have all kinds of coins in type sets, but my main collections are of coins struck before clad was even considered (mid 1870's until 1936).
The only nickel-bronze coins I collect as a series are Canadian dollars as part of a larger set of all Canadian dollar coins (including commems).
Nothing against the metallic content of clad coinage - hey, I collect nickels - I just think the portraits on our modern coins are just boring. So, my vote is no.
Indeed!!! It's not at all what I expected. There are a lot of very experienced collectors here with very valuable collections and I'd have guessed that almost none of them would collect any clad by date. In fact it's a little surprising that clad are included in their type sets.
I'm surprised there aren't more Ike and Kennedy collectors as well, and that there are so many quarter or dime collectors. Perhaps results may be skewed a little bit by a greater likelyhood of collectors participating in the poll but even so it wouldn't explain the distribu- tion of the other answers.
Perhaps there isn't as much room for growth here as I had assumed.
Comments
They are made of pure coin silver (90% AG, 10% CU), or bronze/CU NI.
Tom
Clad coins don't do anything for me.....
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My goal is to complete a set of all denominations in circulation, so that would be all of those minus IKES, but occasionally the banks get some they are willing to part with.
Then I have all of the State Q clad proof sets, and my birth year.
I then put them into envelopes and after several years many have developed a nice tone to them. I keep them in my glove box in my car. The change in heat cold and humidity seems to tone the coins a bit faster then otherwise. I don't think the toning looks any different than any of the older buffalo nickels I've seen in holders. The metal composition is pretty close too.
It's a fun experiment in AT I have going.
I'm a modern type of guy...........................
The oldest proofs I have are 1955.......
Trying to get to my birth year of 1950...............
Nah, it's really great. I love clad
Aerospace Structures Engineer
I am also putting together a set of DCAM and MS67 State Quarters. It is a fun set. Don't really know if it will ever be worth anything but I just love the coins and the history!
Other than that...nopers
I am starting on my Walker Set.
Kennedy Registry Set
and
Short Set Kennedy Registry Set
Surprisingly, I just figured yesterday that I currently have at least one $25 mint sewn bag of statehood quarters since the inception, along with US Mint rolls of each state, to include both minting facilities. It is quite a sickness. To date, not counting ikes, kennedy or any other "clad" coinage............... I have over $3,000.00 (face value, not mint costs) just in these stupid state quarters, with fifteen states yet to go !
Helppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp !
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
Check my ebay BIN or Make Offers!!
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
Oscar Wilde
Collect for the love of the hobby, the beauty of the coins, and enjoy the ride.
Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society.
I also like the Ike's.
My grandchildren. The heirs to my collection! (Just not to soon I hope)
I collect clad missing clad.
Does that count?
I stick to coins, basically (qualifer), that were minted before my birth date. Clad at that time was just a vision in the mints eyes at that time.
Ken
Joe
what I WON'T do is pay more than face value for a clad coin.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
I like the clad washington quarters (65-98) more than other clads and hope one day to show off the Dansco album of 1932-1998 quarters I am assembling. Some of the clads are PQ wildly toned stunners, both MS Circulation strikes and Proofs.
The best part of collecting clads is that for the most part they are cheap, cheap, cheap (especially the raw coins) and most people do not care about them (so that those who do can pick out the cherries and leave everyone else the dogs).
Sleep well tonight for the 82nd Airborne Division is on point for the nation.
AIRBORNE!
I don't particularly consider metal content a factor when deciding what or what not to collect.
<< <i>I voted "None" but I posted to show support for those who do collect moderns. My stance has less to do with what I perceive as investment and more to do with my interests. Truly, there are more US coin series that I have no interest in than there are series that I do have an active interest in. >>
Yea, verily.
I have all kinds of coins in type sets, but my main collections are of coins struck before clad was even considered (mid 1870's until 1936).
The only nickel-bronze coins I collect as a series are Canadian dollars as part of a larger set of all Canadian dollar coins (including commems).
Obscurum per obscurius
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<< <i>very interesting results >>
Indeed!!! It's not at all what I expected. There are a lot of very experienced collectors here
with very valuable collections and I'd have guessed that almost none of them would collect
any clad by date. In fact it's a little surprising that clad are included in their type sets.
I'm surprised there aren't more Ike and Kennedy collectors as well, and that there are so
many quarter or dime collectors. Perhaps results may be skewed a little bit by a greater
likelyhood of collectors participating in the poll but even so it wouldn't explain the distribu-
tion of the other answers.
Perhaps there isn't as much room for growth here as I had assumed.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.