Searching for a 1971D 1977D on silver planchet

Ben Cartwright SASS

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Aug 7, 2012
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I have been weighing up the 71D's and 77D's trying to find one that is silver.

I decided to try using my reloading scale that I got at Cabella's for about $100, I use it to weight loads to a 10th of a grain. I calibrated the scale with 3 different 50 gram weights, one at a time.

I am finding that most clad halves are in the range of 11.20 to 11.35 grams.

I decided to weight up 40 of the 40% silver I have found this fall. I was really surprised at what I found. Most of the 40% halves were XF-AU, not worn at all.

The weights I am getting are from 11.10 to 11.75, they should be 11.50, they were all over the map, many in the 11.35 - 11.40 range.

Leads me to believe that weighing the coins to try to find an heavier one is a crap shoot at best.
 

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Bad Karma

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Dec 16, 2014
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I think doing it by sound would be the easiest method to identify candidates for those types of coins.
 

CW3(ret) US Army

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Jun 30, 2011
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I have been weighing up the 71D's and 77D's trying to find one that is silver.

I decided to try using my reloading scale that I got at Cabella's for about $100, I use it to weight loads to a 10th of a grain. I calibrated the scale with 3 different 50 gram weights, one at a time.

I am finding that most clad halves are in the range of 11.20 to 11.35 grams.

I decided to weight up 40 of the 40% silver I have found this fall. I was really surprised at what I found. Most of the 40% halves were XF-AU, not worn at all.

The weights I am getting are from 11.10 to 11.75, they should be 11.50, they were all over the map, many in the 11.35 - 11.40 range.

Leads me to believe that weighing the coins to try to find an heavier one is a crap shoot at best.

:coffee2: I rim check 1st than use sound as a backup. I haven't missed a silver coin yet. If I found 1 of those than I would also use the scale as a 3rd test to be certain.
HH
Gary
 

Twitch

Silver Member
Feb 1, 2010
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Weighing them will be the slowest and least reliable way to find a 1 in a 100,000,000 coin. Just date check your silvers.
 

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Ben Cartwright SASS

Ben Cartwright SASS

Bronze Member
Aug 7, 2012
1,619
1,537
Massachusetts
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Whites, Garrett
Primary Interest:
Other
I was playing around with my 40%ers and most are in the 11.3 to 11.7 gram range found one a 1967 that is 12.55 and doesn't show any clad on the rim. Took it to a coin shop and they suggested I send it to PCGS or someone to authenticate as it certainly appears to be 90% Most of my 90% '64's are 12.3 to 12.55 in weight.

back to the 71D and 77D, how does date checking them tell you if they are silver since most are clad? I am not sure the best way to tell on those.

The 1967 certainly looks interesting

1967 half
IMG_20171218_075103439.jpg

1964 half
IMG_20171218_075032791.jpg

IMG_20171218_101229798.jpg
 

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