"Rare coins can vanish in counting machines"

ianSF

Full Member
Apr 6, 2006
113
18
Detector(s) used
Minelab Excal 1000
"Rare coins can vanish in counting machines"

Hopefully no one will read this article and the masses will continue to throw away silver with their clad. If they wise up, we'e out of business!

Ian
--------------
http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/business/15714850.htm
Rare coins can vanish in counting machines
By Lisa Fields
Mon, Oct. 09, 2006
Associated Press

Look closely, some of these coins may be valuable. If the coins are thrown in a coin-counting machine, you’ll never know. Machines simply put coins back in circulation.
Most days of the week, we handle a good chunk of change. But how often do we actually look at those pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters?

These days, for most of us, that’s rare – and it could mean you’re letting valuable coins slip through your fingers.

I examine coins out of habit, because I had a penny collection when I was a kid. Recently, I was surprised to find an 1899 Indian-head cent, which managed to stay in circulation for more than a century before it found its way to my home. It was a rare find, but similar coins might be mixed into the proverbial jug of change.

“Once in a blue moon you’ll find something that’s really valuable, but not as often as years ago,” says Jay Beaton, spokesman for the Colorado-based American Numismatic Association.

This is true partly because people started hoarding older, more valuable coins as soon as the U.S. stopped making silver coinage in 1964. But it’s also true because, thanks to coin-counting machines, you can turn a jar of change into paper money in seconds without looking at a single coin.

Lost in the mix

According to Washington-based Coinstar, about 80 percent of U.S. households accumulate change. And the average household with spare change has about $99 in coins, or a total of $10.5 billion in coins sitting in Mason jars, in piggy banks and between sofa cushions nationwide.

If you dump your $99 or so in loose change into a self-service coin-counting machine, how will you know whether you have old, rare or valuable coins in the mix?

The answer: You won’t. Most coin-counting machines won’t return them to you. The machines have coin-return slots for unrecognizable currency, but a penny is a penny to a coin-counting machine, whether it was minted this year or generations ago.

“Although they may have a higher market value, there is nothing that would differentiate them from a similar coin whose market value is face value only,” Coinstar spokeswoman Marci Maule says. “Coins including the Eisenhower silver dollar and 1943 steel pennies may not be returned to the customer. This is stated on our user interface before the user begins a transaction, so we suggest that they sort these out along with foreign coin.”

Different brands of coin-counting machines may accept or reject different coins, but as a general rule, an old and therefore valuable coin will be accepted at face value by all such machines.

Back in the register

There’s no way for the machines’ owners to realize there’s anything of value inside, either. All coins in the machines go back into circulation, so any rare coins that you inadvertently dump in will be recirculated, too.

Coin-sorting machines work too quickly to note a coin’s date, which often speaks of its worth, says Larry Lorenz, vice president of marketing for the Illinois-based Cummins-Allison, makers of Money Machine self-service coin-counting machines.

The normal life of a circulating coin is 30 years, U.S Mint spokesman Michael White said. Nonetheless, it is possible to find older wheat cents, buffalo nickels, silver coinage and even a century-old Indian-head cent without going to a rare coin shop. But what are the odds?

“I would say, of coins that pass through hands in normal commerce, 1 in 10,000,” says Dennis Tucker, publisher of the Georgia-based Whitman Publishing, which prints coin-price guides. “If they’re observant, their chances of finding a rare coin really increases. You have to pay attention and take a closer look.
 

Upvote 0

RatRacer

Sr. Member
May 23, 2006
339
1
Trafford, PA
Re: "Rare coins can vanish in counting machines"

I wonder if it is possible to buy the bags from CoinStar, since they don't search them.
 

ringding

Hero Member
May 5, 2006
679
15
Detector(s) used
Pioneer 505
Re: "Rare coins can vanish in counting machines"

Ratracer, I double dog dare you to call them and find out. If you do please report back.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top