New Garret AT PRO - I am pretty poor with this device. Too much for me! Nothing significant found. yet!
garrett 150 - starting 4/20/20120 - found 30 cents, all clad.
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Do you folks specify "Customer rolled dimes?"
I don't usually do dimes, but if they were customer rolled, I would be more likely to nab them.
I'll just get specific with the tellers.
Last edited by CoinFetcher; Jun 19, 2012 at 10:49 AM.
I just get whatever but I think cwr are better because I think some machines reject silver coins.
They can also contain a collection dump, and it is more concentrated than one in an MWR box.
1/100 of an American dollar is a cent. It is NOT a penny. The word penny is used by several other countries, such as Great Britain, to denote their smallest denomination. In order to be numismatically correct, you must use the term cent to describe the American coin.
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”
― Edmund Burke
I think he only replied with ok because we don't know what a "ne" roll of quarters is. new roll? anyways I'm just curous if it's mint wrapped or customer wrapped, I'm assuming the latter
I asked a teller about a dime with a "white" rim in her tray. It turned out to be Candian. She said if I wanted coins with white rims that she had two rolls of them. She then handed over a solid roll of quarters and dimes. This happened in Sept of 2011.
Halves: Roll of 16 '64 Kennedy's with 2 walkers and 2 Franklins mixed in.
Quarters: 4 1964 quarters and 1 1949 Canadian Quarter. Customer Wrapped, bought from register at a liquor store after getting 2 silver quarters in change.
Dimes: 3 Mercs and 2 Roosies in 1 MWR. They were the only silvers in the box. Go figure, lol.
Nickels: 2 solid rolls of Buffalos. Only a few legible dates.
Pennies: Multiple solid rolls of Wheats, nothing special though
On this Tuesday I actually had my best find so far. I started working as a teller about four months ago. Another bank employee got me interested in CRH when he showed me some silver he'd collected over the years.
Early Tuesday morning an older woman brought in $180 in quarters to deposit. She mentioned how she was a "good saver" and had been hanging on to the coins for forever. It's worth noting that up to this point I'd found 3 silver quarters, 1 silver canadian quarter and about 10 silver dimes. My jaw dropped when I popped the roll open and it was more than half silver! Seeing all those silver edges in one roll floored me.
All in all there was 25 silver US quarters (dates ranging from 1934-1964, no key 1932s though) and 1 silver canadian (from 1940). Best find so far but I hope it's not my best ever. I'd be lucky to see something like that again this year!
All in all there was 25 silver US quarters (dates ranging from 1934-1964, no key 1932s though) and 1 silver canadian (from 1940).
1932d is also a key date.
1/100 of an American dollar is a cent. It is NOT a penny. The word penny is used by several other countries, such as Great Britain, to denote their smallest denomination. In order to be numismatically correct, you must use the term cent to describe the American coin.
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”
― Edmund Burke