LEGENDARY SCORE!! COIN ROLL HUNTING CANADIAN DIMES!!!

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  • čas přidán 3. 04. 2024
  • northcentralcoins.com/
    We are hunting a few thousand dollars in dimes looking for silver, rare and old coins to add to our coin collection. From NIFC Coins all the way to rare and key date coins these Hunts will Not disappoint.
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Komentáře • 21

  • @clintondemoss9805
    @clintondemoss9805 Před 2 měsíci

    Love that Canadian stuff!!!

  • @marymastromauro8164
    @marymastromauro8164 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I love collecting Canadian coins here in NY

  • @trevorwiden9214
    @trevorwiden9214 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Much love
    Thanks 💯

  • @bullitt7544
    @bullitt7544 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Sweet rolling. Wow. That's a 72 proof.

  • @blueman2012
    @blueman2012 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Wow, silver in the box. I found 2 silver dimes in $250 coin roll hunt this week. Nice to see that silver is still out in circulation. 😊

  • @joelanag5507
    @joelanag5507 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Nice score!

  • @rpmcanada1971
    @rpmcanada1971 Před 2 měsíci +2

    NIce hunt, 5 silver dimes is great! I also found a 1970 in my recent hunt, also with a few light scratches, and a 1941, in 2-box worth, so that's not bad at all, for 2024. There was also 1 single Charles III 2023 in the 2 boxes, so it seems quite rare even though it just came out. As rare as 1970? Well I keep all of them just in case. But are you in 2020? I think I heard you say 2020 at some point, strange to see this as a new video... Still very cool hunts to watch and inspire for my own hunts... Thanks.

  • @paulk229
    @paulk229 Před 2 měsíci

    that 20 Groszy is from Poland

  • @stevengullison410
    @stevengullison410 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I have four of them

  • @StephenLHayes
    @StephenLHayes Před 2 měsíci

    The 1967

  • @TheWinstonDouble
    @TheWinstonDouble Před 2 měsíci

    The 1967 dimes can be either or. Theres a 50% chance of them being 80% silver. Flip a 1968 silver to make it ring, then flip the 67. If they both have the same pitch then it's 50% and if it has a lower pitch that fades quicker then it's 80%

    • @rpmcanada1971
      @rpmcanada1971 Před 2 měsíci

      Totally right! I've always enjoyed to ring all the mystic 1967s 10 and 25 cents that come to me, to discover if each example belongs to the 80% or 50% category, making me ring some 68s and 66-or-before to confirm my initial guess. I've been doing this since I saw my first one in the early 80s (when starting to discover this wonderful hobby). I'm a few years short of being there in 1967 and 1968, and I would imagine the pleasure I would have when the 10 and 25 cents would come out and how to guess what I have. I see the 1967-68 50% alloy as a regretful last goodbye to silver, that would otherwise continue to be there for longer if its price would not have become prohibitive. I'm glad the Centennial made it through, forcing the 50% alloy to be created, not to have to immediately go to nickel during our Centennial festive year. Silver brings prestige, like gold, but is much more affordable. Note that the high-pitch of our 50% silver is due to its copper contents (also being 50%) and you will understand more if you have some early USA Kennedy-design half dollars (or 50 cents). In memory of JFK, USA kept silver at 40% from 1965-70, and a few Holy Grail 71 Ds as well I would love grabbing one for my birth year (I know, they're worth severl K$). Ring a pre-1965 90%, then a 40%, and then a non-silver clad (1971+), and you'll hear that the 90% sounds silvery of course, the 40% will still sound silvery with a high-pitch ring due to the 60% copper (a little more than our 50% silver), and the USA nickel-clad will have the typical very-high pitch due to the 75% copper contents. Finally, back to our Canadian silver, you will find a subtle difference between the typical 80% alloy and the pre-1920 Sterling (also including modern proof strikes), as their 92.5% alloy will sound even a bit more silvery than the 80%. Happy ringing, and collecting!!!

    • @TheWinstonDouble
      @TheWinstonDouble Před 2 měsíci

      @@rpmcanada1971 You're a person who knows their stuff. I originally figured out the ring trick when deciphering US 1982 copper vs zinc cents. Zinc ticks, copper rings. Everyone else just weighs them which is a serious waste of time.

    • @rpmcanada1971
      @rpmcanada1971 Před 2 měsíci

      @@TheWinstonDouble Exactly! I do the same to separate USA 82 pennies, no need of scale! As a matter of fact, I'm legally blind (with small functional vision) and also diagnosed Asperger's syndrome. These combine facts explain my extended memory and enhanced intellectual skills. I avoid reading (unless *very* interesting) and use audio books when available, and my memory does the rest, especially today to skip over those painful "apps", anyways meant to gradually over each upgrade gain control on the human brain. I didn't think of that when I started my Computer Science career 40 years ago, which was then my career rocket launch ramp! As a visually impaired person, it was then the nearly lone way to go, and I didn't know I loved it so much because I'm also Aspeger's (diagnosed in 2008). I still love math, programming, science in general (including my knowledge of metal contents) today. What seems contradictory is that, as the "smartphone trend" grows, so does my hate for these visually inaccessible gadgets, deterring me anyways from using my human strengths to do things my way, continuing to value not only my strengths, but also hoping other people will do the same, because yes, the price to pay is feeling lonely as a human in this jungle... That's the reason I congratulate you to do the same as me (at least for coins) because there is an app to do this but so what? Also there is an app to calculate the speed of records on a turntable (I'm a vinyl collector, too, for sound richness, of course), but again so what? It's much better to look at the strobe light or listen and try to feel if the speed is right... This again will strengten your human skills. Back to coins, I recently discovered there exists a very rare 1983 copper US penny, so you should ping these as well to find the Holy Grail (worth several hundred dollars). Finally, 1942 is a key war-time period to experiment coins for both USA and Canada (at least), for all denominations! Our ringing skills will be happy to experiment many things in that period, and surprisingly, many of these subtle facts are not documented anywhere! Was those subtle changes kept secret for the War? Well, I discovered so far that 1942 is a split year for Canadian pennies, between the early composition that has a bit more tin, and the newer composition that stood for at least 1979. I have several examples of 1942s both old and new alloys. They ring very slightly different, and the old ones look darker while having a more "silvery" surface look (probably due to tin) and the new alloy look more brownish. This is comparing brown examples with some wear. None is rare as I found a few examples of each. And back to USA 50 cents (halves), I once got a 1934, 1941, 1943 and 1963, I got somewhere near 1997. Imagine what: while all are known to be 90% silver, the 1934 and 1941 ring identical, but slightly different from the ring of the 1943 & 1963 (also identical). What happened between 1941 and 1943 to US silver? Nothing is documented anywhere! Is that also true for dimes and quarters? I must someday but rolls containing all years, and preferably many examples of the 1941-43 period to run extensive ring tests.... Well, that's what I discovered so far, but I'm sure there is more I don't know, not having all the coins. You might want to enjoy making these experiments if you have the coins. Again, happy ringing, and feel free to share with me more facts and strengts of your life. Hoping I was not too long, but I felt the need to write to "justify" my acute skills shown in my first message...

  • @arthurok327
    @arthurok327 Před 2 měsíci

    Howdy, I just tried to ask you a question about a 1967, fish Canadian dime, and it's not magnetic, you did a video awhile ago about this dime, I left a comment about it, but you never responded, and I just tried again to ask you on your livestream, but you didn't respond, I would really appreciate some advice what I should do next about this 1967, fish Canadian, none magnetic dime, Thank you

    • @TheWinstonDouble
      @TheWinstonDouble Před 2 měsíci

      They are not supposed to be magnetic. That is normal.

    • @arthurok327
      @arthurok327 Před 2 měsíci

      @TheWinstonDouble Doesn't it make that silver, it's got a dull look to it, like my other silver pieces, plus it's 1967, fish Canadian dime, I know that's worth a lot of money, I'm just not sure where to take it for authentication.. he did a video on this 1967 fish dime, and I've also just found it in a magazine with other collectable Canadian coins,

    • @TheWinstonDouble
      @TheWinstonDouble Před 2 měsíci

      @@arthurok327 Theyre made of silver and they're worth about a buck and a half right now.

    • @arthurok327
      @arthurok327 Před 2 měsíci

      @TheWinstonDouble ok, Thank you

  • @user-lb3cz7jk3g
    @user-lb3cz7jk3g Před 2 měsíci

    У Меня есть 5 МОНЕТ МНОГО Канада 10центов 1969 продам ваша цена