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OZ copper rounds - true or false - Page 2

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  1. #21
    Copper Head started this thread.
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    I feel the bet by hand method to sort pennies is the sound copper pennies do make a high tingle bell sound compared to the clunk sound of Zinc - thats a guarantee just drop a few to a table,you will see haw fast that is. you will never have to look at the dates,
    I have found 1982 Zinc and 1982 copper - the sound does not lie. I see weighing as to slow for each penny .



  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by drozenski View Post
    how do you get the copper rounds out?
    i use my trusty punch, hammer and vise, i set the heat sink on top of the vise with a gap wide enough for the copper to fall out, center the punch and about 2 whacks, ive only had about 20 of these, i wish they were all this style, the yard manager said he never seen any before

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    Quote Originally Posted by IdahoScrapper View Post
    You seem quite fascinated with copper.

    Here's a pic of a few copper pieces out of heat sinks.

    Do you know if these are pure copper or mixed with something else?

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    I saw 1 oz copper bars go for $4 each plus 10% fee to auction today. Makes no sense at all. I can only get slightly above $2 lb for scrap copper here locally. There seems to be a big gap between perceived value and actual value. Take a look at coinflations website for metal value of coins. The pre-82 pennies are .024 for a 240% return.

  5. #25
    Copper Head started this thread.
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    yes the gap between perceived value and actual value is seemingly not diminishing .but people seem to want some thing that is nice to look at which is an emotional purchase . After all - in a pinch a person could just goto lowes an get copper pipe and start hording.

  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by Copper Head View Post
    I feel the bet by hand method to sort pennies is the sound copper pennies do make a high tingle bell sound compared to the clunk sound of Zinc - thats a guarantee just drop a few to a table,you will see haw fast that is. you will never have to look at the dates,
    I have found 1982 Zinc and 1982 copper - the sound does not lie. I see weighing as to slow for each penny .
    Maybe it's because I'm half Dutch, but I've always been able to distinguish coins by sound; denominations as well as metal types... Hear some coins drop in the store, "That lady just dropped two dimes and a quarter," it weirds some people out, and that's why it's fun :-P

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    This thread is over 10 years old and I thought I would bump it to the top.

    We can learn something from this as the price of copper rounds is still about the same today.

    What does that tell us?

    The collector value hasn't changed on copper rounds in 10 years.

    I find that most Indian heads are about a dollar give or take.

    Same with many other coins, they have a value to collectors of about a dollar.

    I pay around a dollar each for many coins that I buy. And I buy many at .05 to .25 each.

    I will pay $7.00 to $13.00 a pound for many types of coins and tokens.

    I like pennies, nickels and 50 cent pieces as well as most any large coins.


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