bradley1719
Full Member
- Oct 26, 2014
- 108
- 41
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Thanks for the update. Sounds like you had a great time and a very positive experience.
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I really enjoyed this post... I enjoy coins for what they are historically, and could care less about the silver/gold aspect - needless to say I'm not any type of collector other than having a few Whitman boxes full of foreign coins and discontinued U.S. (is that what y'all call coins that aren't minted anymore?) coins.
Your post was cool because I've always wondered what actually goes on at these kind of events. I like your explanation and casual approach and the fact that you don't have snide comments about the guys who are interested in numismatics, but don't know where to begin - or the guys who don't give a rats butt about anything other than collecting a "theme"... If i ever started collecting at a more committed level, I'd almost guarantee that i'd be a "theme" collector. For example, the one coin i want to buy is a 1936 Texas Centennial Half Dollar. I don't want it slabbed, i just want to put it in an air-tite capsule and on an acrylic stand in my texas history curio cabinet. I still don't own one only because I'm terrified to buy one on Ebay because I'm uninformed and want to ensure i get an authentic one, haha.
My idea of awesome coinage is getting a steel cent back in my change.
I wish someone would make a post just like yours about one of the big Virginia or Tennessee Civil War Shows.
~Tejaas~
I once had one of the Texas half dollar commems like that and they are great looking. If you buy one I would recommend you get one slabbed by PCGS or NGC so you can feel confident of getting a real one and it will probably be in great shape. You can always carefully crack it out of the slab if you don't plan on reselling it and just want to keep it in an air tite.
Jim
Thats a good idea, thanks for the info... If i remember correctly i have to go thru a dealer to have something graded since i don't have a membership or account with either grading firm, correct?
~Tejaas~
You should be able to buy the coin already graded (slabbed). Most of them (state half dollar commems) I see at the dealers are slabbed to begin with, unless they are lower quality that aren't worth getting graded- you probably wouldn't want to get a lower quality one anyway.
If you live in Texas I would imagine the local dealers there see a lot of them? They greysheet at $130 for a MS64 and $165 for a MS65 (MS=mint state). You would probably pay $20 or so over those prices retail I am guessing.
Jim
Jim,
As you described your days, I was "along for the ride". The next best thing to being there. I was wondering about the amount and kind of change cash you ended up taking. Did you have enough? Any specifics size bills that you ran out of?
One fellow I know buys 100 lbs. of wheat pennies and pays about $250.00. He then puts them into a coin rolling machine and then sells them for $2.50 a roll at the local flea market. Would this type of presentation and packaging be something that be profitable and easy to do in a setting like you attended?
Thanks for making time to share your experience,
Bill
Bill,
I went to the bank a day or two before day 1 of the show and picked up roughly $200 in 20's, $100 in 10's, $100 in 5's, and $30 or so in 1's. I expected people would be paying with larger bills (that is what I was told by my dealer friend) but it seemed most of my buyers had smaller bills to pay with.
I was using one of those zippered bank money bag things but when the action got hot I found myself stuffing bills into my pockets in that I kept the "change bag" on the back table and hidden, and it got to be a bit of a hassle to keep going back to get it for each customer. When things would slow down I tried to be somewhat secretive and would empty the bills out of my pocket and put them into the "change bag" (bills segregated by denomination). I kept all the larger bills 100's and 50's in my wallet and pockets just in case somehow the change bag got snatched. I decided after the show to keep the remaining change bills together and lock them up for the next show and not spend them (after taking out what was over my initial amount).
One thing I did wrong: My coin dealer friend had to chastise me a bit though because when I would go out to my car from time to time during the day or simply walk outside for fresh air, I would forgot to take off my "dealer badge" which was worn around my neck on a lanyard. He said crooks sometimes target dealers in parking lots or follow them home from the shows. The show was in a "good neighborhood" and had lots of paid security (off duty cops?) so I wasn't too worried (plus I have a CCW and had a "little friend" with me). But in hindsight I should have been a bit more careful and will be next time on that issue.
As far as selling wheaties at the show, I don't know how that would have worked here. I would imagine some would have bought them but since I only had silver to sell, people who were looking for other things probably just passed my booth after a quick look. Many folks would look and not ask for anything. I would often say "are you looking for anything in particular?" since I had some stuff put away because I couldn't fit it all in the cases. Most would say "no, just looking", and then walk off and go to the next booth.
Jim
100 lbs of Wheaties come out to 14,600 cents. Rolled into 50 cent rolls equal 292 rolls, and at $2.50/roll, he'd take in $730. Subtract $250 for the initial purchase price of the 100 lbs equals a nice $480 profit. Sounds like a good thing to get into.
Bill, There is no chart on the net or elsewhere that I know of to show how many U S coins are in a pound. I'm somewhat familiar with weights of coins AND I like math. I've collected coins for a long, long time. A Wheat cent weighs 3.1 g (grams). There are 146 Wheat cents to a pound, but since the Wheat cent is 95% copper, you'd need 154 Wheats to have 1 lb of pure copper.
To find out a pound of coins, divide the weight of a coin into 28.35....our gram weight of an ounce, (NOT Troy weight). Then multiply that answer times 16 (for ounces)= the answer. Example: Wt of a clad dime (silver dime weighs 10% more) = 2.27 g. Divide 2.27 into 28.35 = 12.49 (dimes per oz.). Multiply 12.49 X 16 (ounces) = 200 dimes per lb (actually 199.84). Nickel -- wt 5 g. 5 into 28.35 =5.67 (nickels per ounce). Multiply 5.67 X 16 ounces= 90.72 nickels per lb.
Try the above on a quarter and half.