Hi, I have some worn coins like the buffalo nickel on the pic where you can not identify the date anymore. No way to put it in my collection. What do you do with those coins?
Quote: "Ronald70"Hi, I have some worn coins like the buffalo nickel on the pic where you can not identify the date anymore. No way to put it in my collection. What do you do with those coins?
I have a large jar where it all goes in - maybe one day i will go back through them all but it's mainly junk pennies and very worn coins with no visible date.
Silver though if you have quite a few bits may be worth selling for scrap and using the money to reinvest.
There is an acid you can buy that will bring the date on buffalo nickels back out. It does ruin the coin some but with no date it is not worth anything now.
sell them as a lot on ebay. Ask for 99 cents, maybe they will go higher.
Some people who make jewelry or art will like them. that is the 'highest and best use', I think.
Jamais l'or n'a perdu la plus petite occasion de se montrer stupide. -Balzac
I donate coins like this to my local coin club where they have a kids table where they can get coins for free. This is how we try to spark interest in coin collecting in youngsters.
Quote: "ken6528"There is an acid you can buy that will bring the date on buffalo nickels back out. It does ruin the coin some but with no date it is not worth anything now.
Usually I wouldn't buy/keep a coin like this... but if you're going to I suggest doing this. You might as well, anyway.
Quote: "ken6528"There is an acid you can buy that will bring the date on buffalo nickels back out. It does ruin the coin some but with no date it is not worth anything now.
Usually I wouldn't buy/keep a coin like this... but if you're going to I suggest doing this. You might as well, anyway.
I think its called nicadate (not sure about the spelling of it)
'We make a living by what we get, we make a life by what we give.'
Sir Winston Churchill
Yes it is Nic-a-date. It is for sale on eBay. You can google it and find YouTube videos on how it works.
I bought a bottle and will post pictures here on how good it works.
I bought one of these "no date" indian heads back when I had no idea what I was buying, I just liked it. Now I know a bit more. I keep it in my collection next to another Indian Head that does have a date you can see. It has become a great conversation piece as it's a good example of how a coin can be minted just all wrong (Laughs) with something as the date being so high it wears away quickly with use.
Collector of Third Reich coins (1933 - 1946), and Australian coins.
Not swapping at this time.
I don't throw them away, I don't actually throw any of them. They are still like real coins if they are still slightly eligible and stay in my collection. But some coins with worn dates and complete illegibility annoy me a lot.
It is fun to try to recognize lowballs and I keep them if I don't have the km#. I usually buy and sell bulklots and I try to clean them out of very bad shape modern coins. So usually I just throw them into metal recycling or send to Leftovercurrency.com. I don't think that many collectors want to pay for the weight of road killed pennies.
Quote: "harryg"I donate coins like this to my local coin club where they have a kids table where they can get coins for free. This is how we try to spark interest in coin collecting in youngsters.
I love that! So cool!
I don't get rid of mine, I love a lot of coins that others consider "junky". So much history to be told. They often end up in the albums as if they were in pristine condition.
My brother in law is a 3rd grade school teacher. I give him these types of coins and he gives them out as incentives to his students to try and do better. Since the start of 2016 I donated 216 coins to this cause. He claims the students love it and really challenge themselves to do better. The only requirement for the student is to read up about the country of the coin they get on wikipedia. I also give him postage stamps. Have given about 150 over the past few years.
This practice makes me happy and I hope it creates an interest for these 3rd graders.
Aaron
I save such coins in a jar, coins too worn out, corroded or damaged to identify beyond type.
They are good for:
* gifts to include in swaps
* gifts for children (to start the next generation of collectors)
* filler for bulk lots
* scrap metal
* spending (if able)
* trade items for geocaching
* boardgame accessories
I put a lot of old and worn coins in an antique-looking vase and burried it sneakily in my brothers garden, who is also a coin collector.... was big fun at small cost....
Quote: "yvon"I put a lot of old and worn coins in an antique-looking vase and burried it sneakily in my brothers garden, who is also a coin collector.... was big fun at small cost....
Well I took an old 3 ring note book. And use my old coin pages. And made a dead coin collection. I have a page for un id coins. then have a page of each country. The UK has a page just for penny's and one for 1/2 penny's
Coins like this
and here is one iam still looking for what country, but don't have the time now
And she getting full.
Here is my other George III Ireland 1/2 penny
just enough face to see he is facing right
Iam really not sure why I keep them. It fun to ID them. But I do like them.
Here are some of my dead US nickel
Shield nickel 1866=1883 all you can see is the bottom of the 5
And one my many V nickels a 1908 or 03
I know they have no value but keep just the same
I usually don't buy coins so battered I have trouble telling it's type... if I receive any of them as part of a lot or something I chuck them out if they're worn smooth, or give them away.
An exception might be made if it's still visible that the coin is a scarce type that I wouldn't be able to afford/find in better condition. That's how I got my Fukien 10 Cents, 1912 (first) issue.
Yes Bas S Warwick the fun is trying to find out what they where. I have a bag I just pull those one out. I get many in lots and people send them to me. To get a good home. And yes I put them in flips and put in a book. Or my Dead coin collection.
Quote: "yvon"I put a lot of old and worn coins in an antique-looking vase and burried it sneakily in my brothers garden, who is also a coin collector.... was big fun at small cost....
Has he found it yet?
In 1999 I was on an Archaeology field school with my uni class and one of the other students buried a 20 cent piece a centimetre or so under where I was digging out a prehistoric eel rack (c.1800), and I got so excited thinking it was a Victorian coin - imagine my face when it said Elizabeth II, New Zealand 1986!
The guy got told off with ruining the context for playing a practical joke and I got to keep the coin which was still legal tender then
I love coins. Especially silver, gold and anything really old.
Member of the Royal Numismatic Society of New Zealand and the Auckland Numismatic Society
I keep all worn coins not suitable for swap and I make proselitism
I hide an old coin at the edge of the sidewalk in front of a bar so that the passerby finds it and says oh! what the hell is it ? a rusty 50 Para Yugoslav! may it be a treasure
and wham ... he begins to collect worldcoins