LooseChange
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- Sep 28, 2012
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- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
Every now and then, I drop a few nickels into the vending machine at work and then push the coin return. I get all nickels back and search them (different nickels come back than what I put in). I can keep repeating that until I feel shamed/embarrassed enough to leave.
I haven't figured out how many times I could do that, but I know it is somewhere more than 15. I've found 2 keepers doing that (keepers by my standards anyway).
Today, I was surprised to get a 1992 Canadian in exchange for a Jefferson. There wasn't anything special about it, I was just surprised to get a Canadian nickel from a vending machine. I dropped it back in and sure enough, it took - the machine showed 0.05 credit. I pressed the coin return and got a US Jefferson.
So, I did some research. 1982 to 1999 Canadian nickels (as well as some other mintages) are the same alloy as modern US nickels (75%/25% ), the same diameter (21.2mm) and nearly the same weight (slightly lighter because they are slightly thinner). That makes me believe that bank counters (and Coinstar for that matter) will probably take them. Although I could just occasionally feed them into the vending machine at work
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I looked through my off-sorted Canadian coin bin and found 83 1982 to 1999 Cad-Nics that I figured I'd have to hold until visiting our northern neighbor. Sure, that's only $4. But, still fun to discover.
I haven't figured out how many times I could do that, but I know it is somewhere more than 15. I've found 2 keepers doing that (keepers by my standards anyway).
Today, I was surprised to get a 1992 Canadian in exchange for a Jefferson. There wasn't anything special about it, I was just surprised to get a Canadian nickel from a vending machine. I dropped it back in and sure enough, it took - the machine showed 0.05 credit. I pressed the coin return and got a US Jefferson.
So, I did some research. 1982 to 1999 Canadian nickels (as well as some other mintages) are the same alloy as modern US nickels (75%/25% ), the same diameter (21.2mm) and nearly the same weight (slightly lighter because they are slightly thinner). That makes me believe that bank counters (and Coinstar for that matter) will probably take them. Although I could just occasionally feed them into the vending machine at work

I looked through my off-sorted Canadian coin bin and found 83 1982 to 1999 Cad-Nics that I figured I'd have to hold until visiting our northern neighbor. Sure, that's only $4. But, still fun to discover.
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