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Are people on Ebay nuts? - Page 2

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  1. #21
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    I just spent $1500 on a penny... 1909s VDB



    The price for the 1920 is a little much because of the marks. I would pay around $60 for it though.


  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by PartTimeScrapper View Post
    I dont know this 1909 penny sold for $8600.01.
    http://www.ebay.com/itm/1909-S-VDB-1...item2a193f17cc

  3. #23
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    OMG if you have pentium pro chips to sell put them on ebay now. This auction is up to $175 a pound.
    http://www.ebay.com/itm/Lot-15-Scrap...item43ad4c6849

  4. #24
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    *Runs off to look through the chips & pennies* lol

    People are nuts.

  5. #25
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    hey guys ive been CRH for about 3 years now ( Coin Roll Hunting), if you go on youtube you will see the mass amount of people doing it.. and i also have been hoarding copper pennies i have about 2500 pounds right now.. a have a couple 55 gal drums filled waiting when the gov gets rid of the penny so we can melt as for now i sell them on ebay for 100# lots every so often... i hit 5 banks a week for pennies and kennedy halves, i also have a penny sorter by reydel i paid about 530$ for it, you throw your pennies into the machine and it sorts the copper ones and spits them to the left and the non copper ones get spit to the right and go back to the bank....
    ive had some issues with the banks in my town regarding getting x amount of pennies a week and now i visit the surrounding towns to get pennies from them and the bank that gave me the issues gets them returned to...i sort roughly 1000$ face value a week of pennies and sort about 3000$ face in kennedy halves a week..
    *i have scrap metal running through my blood and i love it*

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  7. #26
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    $505 for the lot of 15 this afternoon !? Can that be right ?????!
    Last edited by Dumpster-Dee; 02-19-2012 at 02:45 PM.

  8. #27
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    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...vip=true&rt=nc

    Look at this one from same guy. 44.45 lbs of green metal fiber sold for $616 after fees and shipping he netted over $11 a pound for those.

  9. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by ElectricMetal View Post
    Somewhat along the same lines.....
    I had no idea that pre-1982 (95% copper) Pennies were actually selling at almost 2x face value on Ebay. I know that's the metal value, but given that it's illegal to melt these things down for repurposing, that seems crazy. I guess folks are expecting laws to change at some point.
    These are not just listings, they're actual sales. I guess I'm very behind the times on these things.
    http://www.ebay.com/itm/10lbs-30-Rol...item2a19783b36
    look at www.realcent.org

  10. #29
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    [QUOTE=jerseyscrapper, ...55 gal drums filled waiting when the gov gets rid of the penny so we can melt..[/QUOTE]

    Folks, correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe it is illegal to melt U.S. coins for ANY purpose. And Feds don't fool around when it comes to these types of laws. Personally, I wouldn't touch this copper strategy with a 10-foot pole.

    My 2c.

  11. #30
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    Only cents and nickels are illegal to melt - and there is an exception for the 1942-1945 war nickels since they are 35% silver. All other coins are legal to melt - but they're worth far more as a coin than as scrap. It is also illegal to export more than $50 of cents or nickels. Most people I know aren't melting them, they're hoarding in case TSHTF.

    There are two major schools of thought on that. The first is that if things really go south: gold, silver, and copper will be worthless and only bullets and food will matter. The second is that gold, silver, and copper have been used as a convenient medium of trade for thousands of years and will continue in that function as long as they are relatively scarce.

    I saw someone post something (I forget who now - sorry) about how aluminum was more valuable than gold at one point due to it being so difficult to refine. While true, that is no longer the case - enough has been mined and refined that it can't come close to gold. Aluminum (in various ores) is one of the most common metals on the planet.

    I prefer a more balanced approach - plenty of precious metals and plenty of bullets to protect them.

  12. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by martyweil View Post
    Folks, correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe it is illegal to melt U.S. coins for ANY purpose. And the Feds don't fool around when it comes to these types of laws. Personally, I wouldn't touch this copper strategy with a 10-foot pole.

    My 2c.
    While I wouldn't melt them myself, if I had a batch I would certainly sell them to the fools paying 2x face value!

    That being said, I am NOT going to spend my time tripping over dollars to find dimes! (Or in this case pennies!)
    There is much more valuable scrap to go after out there!

    Just my 4 cents.
    Burly Smash![/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT]
    John Terrell (248) 224-2188
    Burly Guys Junk Removal LLC
    5499 Perry Drive Unit P Waterford, MI 48329
    http://www.burlyguys.com

  13. #32
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    I posted about Aluminum. As far as gold goes even with the $1800 spike people who purchased gold in 1980 when it spiked at $800 an ounce are still under water considering inflation. 1 USD in 1980 is worth $2.50 today using CPI data (which is itself rigged because they got rid of data that made theindex look bad). Diamonds are another investment people get burned on (gem stones in general unless you find one in a ditch). As with anything else, investing in something when everybody else is doing it is not a good idea.

    While most of the easy to find metals on the surface of the earth are mined, making recycling profitable, there will come a day soon enough where all those metals on the ocean floor (concentrated around heat vents) will be very profitable to mine because of the ore/ton of rock ratio.

    There are people buying up rolls of change looking for silver coins (after silver spiked in the last 5 years) but coin collectors (and bank employees) have been doing that since the 1970's so you will find very few silver coins in those tubes. Wheet pennies are worthless except in bulk and even then hunting for them is a waste of time. Unless you are experienced in collecting coins its not something you should bother with. The price guides on the net for coins are for dealers selling to collectors (gives you an idea of what you would pay for them). Dealers have metric tons of those "hard to find items" and will pay you pennies on the dollar IF they need a specific coin and have a buyer waiting for it. The only stuff worth anything are real rarities and only in top mint condition and even then dealers pay less then 40% of retail after they screw you on grading.

    While it might be illegal for a US citizen to melt down pennies and nickels for metal value, I don't think sending a billion pennies to China for them to melt it down would be a problem so people will hoard pennies hoping the metal value rises enough to make shipping worth it. Most people are better off in the long run if they take that $1000 they have and pay down their 18% credit card and not hoard pennies in the basement.

    If TSHTF you are better off in a small rural farm out in the middle of nowhere packing heat then sitting in any city with a stack of precoius metals.

    Still coin collecting can be a cheap and fun hobby, I set aside anything in my change that is silver or old. The stuff does pop up once in a great while when some old lady breaks open her piggy bank to buy bread. Ever notice that since the Canadian Dollar is worth more then the US one you don't find Canadian change much anymore here in the US? Just don't expect to make money in any area you have no clue about.

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  15. #33
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    unknownk : Great analysis. Down to earth. People don't often enough crunch the numbers. Or take a common sense approach. Too easy to get caught up in the fluff. : Paul


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