Gold ring, silver dime, cutout coin pendant, dollar bill from the middle school and 2 rings and clad from the park

tnt-hunter

Bronze Member
Apr 20, 2018
1,883
10,064
Mountain Maryland
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
9
Detector(s) used
Fisher CZ-21, Minelab Equinix 800, ,Garret AT Pro,
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
DAY 1
It was 22 degree and the ground was crusty, but there wasn’t any wind, the sun was shining brightly and the temperature rose to 35 degrees so it was the first really good weather hunt for me in awhile. I went back to the middle school. It has been several weeks since I was here because the finds were really thinning out. I gridded two small sections and had some luck.

I spent 5.5 hours swingin the CZ21 and found 57 coins with a face value of $4.09, a dollar bill, a serrated knife blade, a pendant, a silver Rosie, gold ring, 2 ace bandage clips, a key tag ring, an old earphone, can slaw, aluminum bottle caps, construction materials, 22 tabs and 14 pencil ends.

DSCN3716.jpeg


It was a great hunt, but not your normal one. On my way to the first grid section I swung the detector and found the Mercury dime pendant on the edge of an undetected section. I found a few coins but not much else on the grid. On the second grid I didn’t find much either except for a few coins and the dollar bill partly rolled up and hiding in the grass. On my way back to the truck after the second grid I found the silver Rosie and 5 minutes after that the gold ring. The best finds were on the way back to the truck, did that ever happen to anyone else? 😂 Yes it seems to happen to a lot of folks.

When I found the merc I thought it was a whole dime. I cleaned off some of the dirt and I could see it was a cutout coin pendant. That’s a first for me. It has a couple of small tarnish spots and was down about 3 inches so it has been here awhile. It really is a dime but I didn’t count it as a coin in the count and face value numbers. The Rosie is a 1963 D. There are not a lot of silver coins here so it was a nice surprise. The gold ring was slightly discolored coming out of the ground. But I could tell it was not plated. It is marked SOLID X GOLD and has a small indentation with an A in it. I tested this one to be sure of the purity and it is 10k. It weighs 6.2 grams or .20 troy ounces which puts the scrap value from our local dealer at $191. My normal hunt pays about $1 or less per hour. Because of the ring this hunt paid a little over $35 per hour. So I had a good day which I really needed to get me back in the detecting spirit. The spirit really faded last week.

DSCN3717.jpeg


I am curious about the SOLID GOLD mark. I have found some information on line, but some of it is confusing. Does anyone know when this mark was used and if it can still be used today? I am curious as to how old this ring is. Most of what I find here is modern, but I did find a barber dime, a couple of musket balls and a trigger guard from a Lancaster rifle so the site does have some older history. I know there are a few people here who really are good at digging up info like this. Any help would be appreciated.

DSCN3718.jpeg


That makes silvers number 96 and 97 and gold number 20 for my year beginning May 1st. I still have 4 months to go in my year so it is looking like a good year for silver and gold if I can keep this up.

DAY 2
It snowed and we had ice on top of it even to the east down the mountain where they get less snow and it’s normally warmer so I couldn’t go out for a few days, which worked out since we had a lot to do for the holidays. The next day it thawed enough so I went to a set of ball fields with a basketball court and a tot lot. I get here a couple of times a year. Some areas were really dead, not a beep to be had, others did have some fresh losses.

I spent 5 hours swingin the CZ21 and found 90 coins with a a face value of $4.92, a stainless fork, 2 rings, 2 pieces of a bill, a whistle, a toy car, Spider-Man for a crock, can slaw, aluminum bottle caps and 18 tabs.

DSCN3719.jpeg


The rose ring looks nice, but it is not. Both rings are kiddie rings. I found 2 little pieces of a $20 bill. I looked all around for the rest, but I couldn’t find anything else. The person who lost the corners probably retrieved the rest of the bill.

DSCN3720.jpeg


DSCN3721.jpeg


Another short week, but tis the season to be busy. I did have some success, gold, silver and money for the clad total so all is good. We will be going away to see our daughter and might not get out again until after the new year. Thanks for looking, stay safe, good luck and may your coil lead you to good things.
 

Upvote 21
DAY 1
It was 22 degree and the ground was crusty, but there wasn’t any wind, the sun was shining brightly and the temperature rose to 35 degrees so it was the first really good weather hunt for me in awhile. I went back to the middle school. It has been several weeks since I was here because the finds were really thinning out. I gridded two small sections and had some luck.

I spent 5.5 hours swingin the CZ21 and found 57 coins with a face value of $4.09, a dollar bill, a serrated knife blade, a pendant, a silver Rosie, gold ring, 2 ace bandage clips, a key tag ring, an old earphone, can slaw, aluminum bottle caps, construction materials, 22 tabs and 14 pencil ends.

View attachment 2184456

It was a great hunt, but not your normal one. On my way to the first grid section I swung the detector and found the Mercury dime pendant on the edge of an undetected section. I found a few coins but not much else on the grid. On the second grid I didn’t find much either except for a few coins and the dollar bill partly rolled up and hiding in the grass. On my way back to the truck after the second grid I found the silver Rosie and 5 minutes after that the gold ring. The best finds were on the way back to the truck, did that ever happen to anyone else? 😂 Yes it seems to happen to a lot of folks.

When I found the merc I thought it was a whole dime. I cleaned off some of the dirt and I could see it was a cutout coin pendant. That’s a first for me. It has a couple of small tarnish spots and was down about 3 inches so it has been here awhile. It really is a dime but I didn’t count it as a coin in the count and face value numbers. The Rosie is a 1963 D. There are not a lot of silver coins here so it was a nice surprise. The gold ring was slightly discolored coming out of the ground. But I could tell it was not plated. It is marked SOLID X GOLD and has a small indentation with an A in it. I tested this one to be sure of the purity and it is 10k. It weighs 6.2 grams or .20 troy ounces which puts the scrap value from our local dealer at $191. My normal hunt pays about $1 or less per hour. Because of the ring this hunt paid a little over $35 per hour. So I had a good day which I really needed to get me back in the detecting spirit. The spirit really faded last week.

View attachment 2184457

I am curious about the SOLID GOLD mark. I have found some information on line, but some of it is confusing. Does anyone know when this mark was used and if it can still be used today? I am curious as to how old this ring is. Most of what I find here is modern, but I did find a barber dime, a couple of musket balls and a trigger guard from a Lancaster rifle so the site does have some older history. I know there are a few people here who really are good at digging up info like this. Any help would be appreciated.

View attachment 2184455

That makes silvers number 96 and 97 and gold number 20 for my year beginning May 1st. I still have 4 months to go in my year so it is looking like a good year for silver and gold if I can keep this up.

DAY 2
It snowed and we had ice on top of it even to the east down the mountain where they get less snow and it’s normally warmer so I couldn’t go out for a few days, which worked out since we had a lot to do for the holidays. The next day it thawed enough so I went to a set of ball fields with a basketball court and a tot lot. I get here a couple of times a year. Some areas were really dead, not a beep to be had, others did have some fresh losses.

I spent 5 hours swingin the CZ21 and found 90 coins with a a face value of $4.92, a stainless fork, 2 rings, 2 pieces of a bill, a whistle, a toy car, Spider-Man for a crock, can slaw, aluminum bottle caps and 18 tabs.

View attachment 2184458

The rose ring looks nice, but it is not. Both rings are kiddie rings. I found 2 little pieces of a $20 bill. I looked all around for the rest, but I couldn’t find anything else. The person who lost the corners probably retrieved the rest of the bill.

View attachment 2184459

View attachment 2184460

Another short week, but tis the season to be busy. I did have some success, gold, silver and money for the clad total so all is good. We will be going away to see our daughter and might not get out again until after the new year. Thanks for looking, stay safe, good luck and may your coil lead you to good things.
I'd say you had a great day of quality keepers.
The cut out Mercury Dime is awesome.
Liking it for the eye appeal.
Well done on the gold ring. They used this stamp pre 1902 standard. But it has a newer look to the engraving. Then the A stamp looks it fits the era.
I'll go with old, just lost before the stamp gotten alot of wear.

Here's today's melt value.

Screenshot_20241221_074711_Chrome.jpg
 

Congrats on all the great finds - the cut out Merc is ultra cool !

And yes, making the best find of the day at the end of the hunt on the way back to the vehicle has happened to me a bunch of times. From reading other peoples posts over the years it seems to happen fairly often.

Also, I've made my best find of the day after only swinging for a few minutes.
Whenever this happens to me, I usually don't find anything that good during the rest of the hunt - weird !

Lesson learned here - don't ever turn your machine off till your all the way back to your car !
 

I'd say you had a great day of quality keepers.
The cut out Mercury Dime is awesome.
Liking it for the eye appeal.
Well done on the gold ring. They used this stamp pre 1902 standard. But it has a newer look to the engraving. Then the A stamp looks it fits the era.
I'll go with old, just lost before the stamp gotten alot of wear.

Here's today's melt value.

View attachment 2184495
Thanks for the reply. Our local dealer published the price he paid for gold and silver in the newspaper for years. It has always been 86% of melt and every time I have sold to him that is the way it has worked out. So I calculate the value at 86% of melt price.

Have a great holiday, stay safe, good luck and keep swingin..
 

Nice ring. I used to see a lot of cutout coins as jewelry at our local flea market back in the 70's. As a coin collector they always made me cringe. Different story when they come up as a detector find though.
 

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