These videos are win win. If you don't find it boring: you learn interesting facts. If you do find his topics boring: then his calming voice will help send you to a peaceful snooze.
The level of care you take with everything you own/create is admirable. Gives us something to strive for. Thanks so much for yet another astounding and relaxing video.
I'm not sure if you know this but cleaning coins lowers the premium. (Not that these coins have much of a premium, just a warning if you have coins that do have a premium.)
+SGN Zyko (ZyKoTiik) Thanks. I just hope I don't mislead anyone with what I say because I'm not an expert when it comes to the subjects in most of my videos.
People say this is junk silver, but when you have a 200-100 year old Silver coin, don't you ever wonder who owned the coin first and how many times it's travelled from person to person until it finally ends up in your possession
Exactly who just accepts junk objects or items for payment hehe of course if one mans trash was not anothers treasure then the conceot of bartering or thriftstores and thriftshops would not be still in business. But yeah there are all kinds of games, videogames, music and books able to be found and acquired from a thriftshop no joke I even found a Kirby vacuum cleaner there and it was even on an aditional 30 percent off and all I had to do was put a screw and a coord hook spring on it and it was even then still merely because I decided to not actually needed to function
@@RelaxingASMR I actually have (I’d want to guess since I haven’t weighed it yet) 8 pounds of silver nickels. Me and my friend were into coins YEARS ago and we went through a bunch of various coins and I kept the nickels. I knew I still had them all these years but I didn’t remember that they were all silver!
Your vids have the intended calming effect. The major bonus is that they take me back to a simpler time, and remind me of little hobbies and occupations I would like to enjoy again someday. Therapeutic on more than one level. Thank you!
I keep a junk silver container as well. I get a lot of silver coins come through my shop. I can only imagine how many silver coins go through a high volume store like a Wal Mart. A year or so ago Silver was up around $30 per ounce. It was nice to pay 25 cents for a $5 quarter lol!
With the way the Eisenhower's Clank and even though 50 cent pieces that Kennedy through the 90s Clank that I have I wonder if they still have a little more silver in them than the other coins I wonder if they still have 40% even through the 1990s the Kennedys
I think the Eisenhower's are still may be worth a little bit more than face value since they are the last full size dollar, to a collector. They're really not even in circulation anymore occasionally you'll see a Susan B Anthony or the other smaller dollars
I collect for how old it is and stuff not the money and i love 1960 to 1989 quarters and all currency i love the year and stuff so every time i see them imma get them to give to my son once i get to that stage and the way how he handles the coins is very respectful i see ppl scratch 1930s together and i almost punched them 😂
RelaxingASMR They work great on almost anything that can be immersed in water -- fountain pen nibs, coins, glasses, even RC car motor armatures. By the way, thanks for the ASMR videos. This one didn't work for me, but the time management video and the pen-testing videos work very well for me.
+coldhearted1123 Just so you're aware, that ruins the resale value of the coin. Coin collectors want to see the entire history of the coin when they look at it. However, if you don't care about resale value, it doesn't matter. I also have a couple silver coins that I polished so they look pretty, and the rest of them I keep in a safe place.
nbbear55 Lots of people collect "junk silver" coins, and they pay more than the melt value for coins in good (or at least un-altered) condition. For those people, the collecting hobby is more like a treasure-hunt than a financial investment. They just don't pay as much for them as they would pay for specially-struck die-testing coins specifically produced for collectors.
They're preferred in unaltered states, without the tarnish removed and thus keeping the absolute outermost layer of the coin. Better not to clean it, but if you want to that's fine as these were often minted in the tens and hundreds of millions and you want a pretty coin. I get it, coin collectors can tell (and don't have interest in) a polished coin, though. Honestly best to just leave it, at best using lemon juice or something acidic for example is removing the outermost layer of the coin and it's relief. You can't really turn back the clock on a well-circulated coin.
+Taylor77 Thank you. I like pocket knives, but must say that my collection is very small. I have been wanting a new Case Copperlock, but just can't seem to make myself buy one. If I run across any old knives at a price I can't refuse, rest assured that I would show them in a video:)
is there any truth to the whole "coca cola can clean coins" thing? or does that degrade them? did know know about lemon juice as a cleaner, thanks for sharing!
Junk Silver (also called as Constitutional Silver) was made from 1700's-1970 (US Coins 1700's-1964 90% Silver 1965-1970 40% Silver) a collectable coins for numismatist and stackers (stackers is a collector of silver and gold. Such as silver and gold rounds, silver and gold bar, constitutional silver and gold) love your peace dollar
As a Canadian I've always wondered why America seems so loath to adopt a dollar coin for general use. I mean, don't get me wrong, I like the design of American bills, they're probably the most iconic currency in the history of mankind, I just can't help but think that dollar bills are, today, kind of silly. Bills have such a short lifetime before needing to be replaced, and replacing such a low value note so often costs money. Why not just go with much of the rest of the world and use a coin? Not that it really matters in the end. Canadians like their loonies and Americans like their dollar bills. Money should be useful and accepted by people before all else, and for those who don't like it I suppose there will always be silver dollars. :) Incidentally, by the way, nothing actually has truly intrinsic value. All value is relative. What worth is silver to a dieting man in the desert? To him, the most valuable thing in the universe is a glass of water. What worth is water to a drowning man? One can say that a coin composed of silver has more value in itself than a purely fiat coin, but the value is still fundamentally never intrinsic.
+Roflcopter4b I could see you point only if everyone in the world was dying of thirst in the desert, at the same moment. But we know that isn't the case nor ever will be. You are right though that a silver coin isn't going to do much for a thirsty man in the desert, but the water-laden folks that come across his body might possible delight in the silver coins in the dead man's pockets. The enormous effort it takes to mine and produce silver, gives it its intrinsic value. That is why it was used as money in the first place. As for dollar coins, I don't think people like carrying around coins.
+RelaxingASMR I think the problem here is in the use of the word "intrinsic". Strictly speaking it's accepted by pretty much all economists and other experts (including philosophers) that value is fundamentally a relative thing and nothing has true value in itself. Things have certain value to us under certain conditions. As it happens, under most conditions something like silver has value in a human society for a variety of reasons, including rarity, aesthetics, etc, and it's true that a coin made of silver has far more value in itself than a fiat coin, but don't conflate this with an assertion that the value it has is something absolute. The fact that we can conceive of a situation in which silver is worthless, however unlikely or unusual, tells us that value is very much relative. In fact, if value were not relative fiat currency could not operate. It only has value because of government decree and the tacit agreement of society that it has the value we give to it. Precious metals and other commodities are not fundamentally different from this, they just lack the government decree and central control that make currency more stable than bullion.
+Roflcopter4b I can easily carry 30 US $1 bills in my wallet. 30 dollar coins would pull my pants down! :) That's why many Americans just carry paper money or even better, debit/credit cards.
+nbbear55 I can understand that from a user's perspective, but I would have thought the government would be more concerned with wasting less money constantly printing new bills, and not with what people would prefer using.
+Out of Body Pickle I would expect you would sooner or later. Just remember to glance at the edges of dimes, quarters, and half-dollars before putting the coins in the drawer. If you see any copper color, they are not silver.
Next time you clean your junk silver try dissolving baking soda in hot water then in a flat pan lie down a layer of aluminum foil, cover it in the baking soda water and set the silver on the foil, it creates a crude form of electrolysis via electron transfer and the silver debar she's miraculously before your eyes in seconds, it's pretty awesome. It works better on bullion than junk silver though I'm sure 😑
20-30 ounces would be around $15/oz, so $300-$450 ballpark. That's a large portion of many people's checks with bills and the job economy. Good for you though.
+mikelawrence30 Then how could I show them to the next generation? Besides, I like the clinking sounds they make. Keep an eye out for the pre-1965 coins:)
+RelaxingASMR Very good point, and the clinking sounds are delightful. I'm actually from the UK, so we have no silver based coins in circulation any more as far as I'm aware. Since we "decimalised" our currency in 1971, I believe most coins are made with either bronze or copper-plated steel.. My father has a large collection of pre-1971 coins. Unfortunately, I don't think they hold any value.
RelaxingASMR 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 Oh crap! I woke up and saw this. Guess I passed out. So much so, It's 4:40 AM and I'm still in the parking lot of my 2nd job. Oh boy!
These are what is known as junk silver coins. They have no value to collectors and are only worth what the melt value of the metal is. Clean or dirty, value isn't affected, therefor I prefer them to be clean:)
@@RelaxingASMR haha yea, I know, I'm only joking around , that was to reference to another video I watched about cleaning coins 😂 a kind of inside joke, I thought maybe someone would pick up on it,
@@RelaxingASMR you know actually, thanks in part to this very video, I became a coin collector and now I collect junk silver aswell as anything else I think is interesting or a good investment. If I can't buy it at face value I always look for deals. In older silver quarters, like the pre-65 washingtons and the standing liberty quarters, I really love the patina, and history. People actually will pay extra if they have that rainbow toning silver gets in certain conditions ^^
You really shouldn't clean your coins like that. Cleaned coins lose their value and coin collectors can tell when a coin has been cleaned. It's too late now for it to be fixed, but that dropped the value of all cleaned coins you own considerably.
+YuukiRus Games That may be true for truly collectible coins, but the coins in this video are, and always will be, worth only their weight in silver, dirty or clean. That being the case, I'd rather have my coins as clean as possible. Thanks for watching:)
The term "junk silver" refers to silver coins that do not have collectable value. They are only worth what the price of silver is at that time. No matter how dirty, tarnished, or sparkly they are are, they are only worth current silver prices. Therefor, if I'm going to own them, they must be clean and pleasant to look at:)
Jinger Partin yeah me too, really good condition silver coins can have a very nice premium, he’s acting like all silver circulation coins are junk silver coins
List of things I like
1: Asmr
2: Coins
This video is so cool!
you only like 2 things? we gotta get you hooked on minecraft
These videos are win win. If you don't find it boring: you learn interesting facts. If you do find his topics boring: then his calming voice will help send you to a peaceful snooze.
The level of care you take with everything you own/create is admirable. Gives us something to strive for. Thanks so much for yet another astounding and relaxing video.
+CRFTgaming Thank you.
Relaxingasmr
I love watching your videos so relaxing
+RelaxingASMR 50/50 lemon juice and vinegar works better then lemon alone I use it all the time
I don’t watch your videos like these for relaxing or anything stress related I watch them because you teach me things that I was never taught
I'm not sure if you know this but cleaning coins lowers the premium. (Not that these coins have much of a premium, just a warning if you have coins that do have a premium.)
As a Pepsi employee I loved that Pepsi tin!!! I loved the coins as well lol.
I love how interesting the facts are in your videos, I could listen to you for hours, which I plan on doing
ssssshhhhh! dont wake the quarters
Excellent video! Thanks for sharing these uniquely creative offerings with all of us.
I'm just learning about ASMR, but have been stacking silver and collecting coins....your video was a great treat for me, thank you!
Great job on your video and your collection. I love ASMR but I also like collecting metals, so this video is amazing for me. Thanks!
I like how in these videos you make it easy for the viewer to understand what you're talking about, regardless of how much they already know.
+SGN Zyko (ZyKoTiik) Thanks. I just hope I don't mislead anyone with what I say because I'm not an expert when it comes to the subjects in most of my videos.
People say this is junk silver, but when you have a 200-100 year old Silver coin, don't you ever wonder who owned the coin first and how many times it's travelled from person to person until it finally ends up in your possession
Exactly who just accepts junk objects or items for payment hehe of course if one mans trash was not anothers treasure then the conceot of bartering or thriftstores and thriftshops would not be still in business. But yeah there are all kinds of games, videogames, music and books able to be found and acquired from a thriftshop no joke I even found a Kirby vacuum cleaner there and it was even on an aditional 30 percent off and all I had to do was put a screw and a coord hook spring on it and it was even then still merely because I decided to not actually needed to function
You should just open your house as a museum.
+Dan Fraser I would pay a Quarter for admission...even a silver one!
+dperry203 lol
Way to make a guy feel old!
thats $3.50 at the beginning.
dammit loch ness monster, i aint givin you no tree fiddy.
+CycloneMetal A bit of South Park humor huh?
+RelaxingASMR I was wondering if you'd catch that reference or not haha
Did you bring the victim chil?
$3.75 actually
@@shelbysimington4999 I definitely didn't think he would haha!
Recently I had about 5-7 dollars of silver quarters and I spent them at an arcade… sad times.
Oh no!!!!!
@@RelaxingASMR I actually have (I’d want to guess since I haven’t weighed it yet) 8 pounds of silver nickels. Me and my friend were into coins YEARS ago and we went through a bunch of various coins and I kept the nickels. I knew I still had them all these years but I didn’t remember that they were all silver!
Your vids have the intended calming effect. The major bonus is that they take me back to a simpler time, and remind me of little hobbies and occupations I would like to enjoy again someday. Therapeutic on more than one level. Thank you!
I'm glad you like the videos and thanks for commenting. Don't wait too late to take up some simple little hobbies.
I keep a junk silver container as well. I get a lot of silver coins come through my shop. I can only imagine how many silver coins go through a high volume store like a Wal Mart. A year or so ago Silver was up around $30 per ounce. It was nice to pay 25 cents for a $5 quarter lol!
+dperry203 Yes indeed. Silver coins are still floating around out there.
An ounce of silver is like 17 dollars now
28 now!
I always learn when I watch your videos. Thanks!
Another enjoyable and relaxing video....THANKS!!!
+Vjeko Vrcic You're welcome and thank you for commenting!
Thank you for this relaxing and instructive video. You have a quite large collection of precious junk silver :-) !
+PastilleASMR Glad you liked the video:)
great video ! you have a style that's impossible to duplicate.
+Alex Maksymchuk Thanks Alex. Just doing my thing:)
Cool video. Thanks again. I need me some 1930s and 1940s quarters that's for sure and possibly at least even one standing liberty would be cool!
8:34 don't forget about the 1964 peace dollar
Thank you for this tonight.
With the way the Eisenhower's Clank and even though 50 cent pieces that Kennedy through the 90s Clank that I have I wonder if they still have a little more silver in them than the other coins I wonder if they still have 40% even through the 1990s the Kennedys
Wow that voice so calm..
Your tins alone are cool
I think the Eisenhower's are still may be worth a little bit more than face value since they are the last full size dollar, to a collector. They're really not even in circulation anymore occasionally you'll see a Susan B Anthony or the other smaller dollars
Very relaxing! Just subscribed.
+Pigeon Master Thank you and welcome aboard!
By 2040 we gonna miss touching these guys and hearing this to
I collect for how old it is and stuff not the money and i love 1960 to 1989 quarters and all currency i love the year and stuff so every time i see them imma get them to give to my son once i get to that stage and the way how he handles the coins is very respectful i see ppl scratch 1930s together and i almost punched them 😂
You should try an ultrasonic cleaner. It'll remove pretty much everything, including some of the tarnish, without etching the metal like an acid will.
+Shawn Elliott Thanks. I've wondered if one of those would do the trick:)
RelaxingASMR They work great on almost anything that can be immersed in water -- fountain pen nibs, coins, glasses, even RC car motor armatures.
By the way, thanks for the ASMR videos. This one didn't work for me, but the time management video and the pen-testing videos work very well for me.
I should put a video up of all the silver I've dug up metal detecting, I think you'll enjoy it. And the many, MANY, wheaties.
+HeavyMetal Detecting You should do that some time.
Really like your videos , your one interesting person
+Richard Fleming Thanks Richard:)
Dude you are good at. Asmr
Nice junk!
Approximately how much is all that worth?
I use titanium polish to clean silver or copper coins, it shines and puts a protective coat on the coin.
+coldhearted1123 Just so you're aware, that ruins the resale value of the coin. Coin collectors want to see the entire history of the coin when they look at it. However, if you don't care about resale value, it doesn't matter. I also have a couple silver coins that I polished so they look pretty, and the rest of them I keep in a safe place.
+Shawn Elliott I thought junk silver is only worth the melting value of the silver inside. So cleaning it shouldn't matter right?
nbbear55 Lots of people collect "junk silver" coins, and they pay more than the melt value for coins in good (or at least un-altered) condition. For those people, the collecting hobby is more like a treasure-hunt than a financial investment. They just don't pay as much for them as they would pay for specially-struck die-testing coins specifically produced for collectors.
They're preferred in unaltered states, without the tarnish removed and thus keeping the absolute outermost layer of the coin. Better not to clean it, but if you want to that's fine as these were often minted in the tens and hundreds of millions and you want a pretty coin. I get it, coin collectors can tell (and don't have interest in) a polished coin, though. Honestly best to just leave it, at best using lemon juice or something acidic for example is removing the outermost layer of the coin and it's relief. You can't really turn back the clock on a well-circulated coin.
0:37 0:43 me trying to put my life together
I like cats and dogs lmao
please tell me you didn't clean the Peace Dollar...
Probably lol🤦♂️🙈
Good video.. Given the spinning knife I would like to see some pocket knife reviews. Especially if you find some old ones
+Taylor77 Thank you. I like pocket knives, but must say that my collection is very small. I have been wanting a new Case Copperlock, but just can't seem to make myself buy one. If I run across any old knives at a price I can't refuse, rest assured that I would show them in a video:)
is there any truth to the whole "coca cola can clean coins" thing? or does that degrade them? did know know about lemon juice as a cleaner, thanks for sharing!
Junk Silver (also called as Constitutional Silver) was made from 1700's-1970 (US Coins 1700's-1964 90% Silver 1965-1970 40% Silver) a collectable coins for numismatist and stackers (stackers is a collector of silver and gold. Such as silver and gold rounds, silver and gold bar, constitutional silver and gold) love your peace dollar
Full size dollars are cool
Silver quarters are still in circulation?
Absolutely. Silver dimes and half dollars are too, so keep your eyes open, never know when you'll find one in your spare change.
I'll keep an eye out.
As a Canadian I've always wondered why America seems so loath to adopt a dollar coin for general use. I mean, don't get me wrong, I like the design of American bills, they're probably the most iconic currency in the history of mankind, I just can't help but think that dollar bills are, today, kind of silly. Bills have such a short lifetime before needing to be replaced, and replacing such a low value note so often costs money. Why not just go with much of the rest of the world and use a coin?
Not that it really matters in the end. Canadians like their loonies and Americans like their dollar bills. Money should be useful and accepted by people before all else, and for those who don't like it I suppose there will always be silver dollars. :)
Incidentally, by the way, nothing actually has truly intrinsic value. All value is relative. What worth is silver to a dieting man in the desert? To him, the most valuable thing in the universe is a glass of water. What worth is water to a drowning man? One can say that a coin composed of silver has more value in itself than a purely fiat coin, but the value is still fundamentally never intrinsic.
+Roflcopter4b I could see you point only if everyone in the world was dying of thirst in the desert, at the same moment. But we know that isn't the case nor ever will be. You are right though that a silver coin isn't going to do much for a thirsty man in the desert, but the water-laden folks that come across his body might possible delight in the silver coins in the dead man's pockets. The enormous effort it takes to mine and produce silver, gives it its intrinsic value. That is why it was used as money in the first place. As for dollar coins, I don't think people like carrying around coins.
+RelaxingASMR I think the problem here is in the use of the word "intrinsic". Strictly speaking it's accepted by pretty much all economists and other experts (including philosophers) that value is fundamentally a relative thing and nothing has true value in itself. Things have certain value to us under certain conditions. As it happens, under most conditions something like silver has value in a human society for a variety of reasons, including rarity, aesthetics, etc, and it's true that a coin made of silver has far more value in itself than a fiat coin, but don't conflate this with an assertion that the value it has is something absolute. The fact that we can conceive of a situation in which silver is worthless, however unlikely or unusual, tells us that value is very much relative.
In fact, if value were not relative fiat currency could not operate. It only has value because of government decree and the tacit agreement of society that it has the value we give to it. Precious metals and other commodities are not fundamentally different from this, they just lack the government decree and central control that make currency more stable than bullion.
+Roflcopter4b I can easily carry 30 US $1 bills in my wallet. 30 dollar coins would pull my pants down! :) That's why many Americans just carry paper money or even better, debit/credit cards.
+nbbear55 I can understand that from a user's perspective, but I would have thought the government would be more concerned with wasting less money constantly printing new bills, and not with what people would prefer using.
Actually, the U.S. Mint has been trying hard to promote dollar coins, since 2000
if I'm a retail cashier would you expect that sooner or later I will run across one of these?
+Out of Body Pickle I would expect you would sooner or later. Just remember to glance at the edges of dimes, quarters, and half-dollars before putting the coins in the drawer. If you see any copper color, they are not silver.
RelaxingASMR Sweet thanks! In fact I ran across a 1965 quarter while closing up shop haha. I was disappointed. Great video by the way.
They may be junk to you, but they could buy a mean McChicken
Haha
Love that comment on the dog snitching on the cat...hilarious
Physical silver is the only option!
I wish money was still actually worth something
What do you mean
I feel like I'm gonna be a coin Hoarder in the making now! xD
Funny enough after I watched this I started collecting coins at work (Cashier) and now I have a big collection of silver coins and stuff
@@Limestone_Wolf
Keep them for the hard times ahead! Remember all fiat currency goes back to zero value.
0:53 Favorite part
Damn i just dumped my milk gallon of change and all i ended up was messy table
Toothpaste is also a good way to clean silver!
Next time you clean your junk silver try dissolving baking soda in hot water then in a flat pan lie down a layer of aluminum foil, cover it in the baking soda water and set the silver on the foil, it creates a crude form of electrolysis via electron transfer and the silver debar she's miraculously before your eyes in seconds, it's pretty awesome. It works better on bullion than junk silver though I'm sure 😑
The silver *devarnishes
+ninjajim sounds like good advice:)
uhh ignore 30:48
ain't no such thing as junk silver :)
+Viper2026 constitutional silver as we call it
Rule 1-10000000 of numismatics. NEVER CLEAN A COIN!!!!
Rule 2-10000000 of numismatics is to understand that junk silver coins like the ones here, have no numismatic value.
That coin from 1964 looks beautiful, from old age i assume
.. more so before you cleaned it. Still nice though.
I will tell you people this....get some silver while you can at these prices. I have been buying 20-30 ounce per payday.
20-30 ounces would be around $15/oz, so $300-$450 ballpark. That's a large portion of many people's checks with bills and the job economy. Good for you though.
Junk!?! What do you mean?! That's at least 4 dollars!
Very interesting to learn the history of these coins. You could earn a pretty penny on these if you put them on eBay!
+mikelawrence30 Then how could I show them to the next generation? Besides, I like the clinking sounds they make. Keep an eye out for the pre-1965 coins:)
+RelaxingASMR Very good point, and the clinking sounds are delightful.
I'm actually from the UK, so we have no silver based coins in circulation any more as far as I'm aware. Since we "decimalised" our currency in 1971, I believe most coins are made with either bronze or copper-plated steel.. My father has a large collection of pre-1971 coins. Unfortunately, I don't think they hold any value.
RelaxingASMR 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
Oh crap! I woke up and saw this. Guess I passed out. So much so, It's 4:40 AM and I'm still in the parking lot of my 2nd job. Oh boy!
Do you happen to have a 1994 half dollar? JFK is my favorite president and 94 is my birth year haha that's why I'm asking. Thank you.
I have one from that year lol
I always thought old coins shouldn’t be cleaned
These are what is known as junk silver coins. They have no value to collectors and are only worth what the melt value of the metal is. Clean or dirty, value isn't affected, therefor I prefer them to be clean:)
Please make more videos about your coins
Friends don't let friends wash coins
Unless they are Non-numismatic coins like these. Then go ahead and clean away.
@@RelaxingASMR haha yea, I know, I'm only joking around , that was to reference to another video I watched about cleaning coins 😂 a kind of inside joke, I thought maybe someone would pick up on it,
You should probably not put the silver coins in acid, the natural patina makes a coin more valuable
Perhaps on collectable coins, but mine are junk coins that are only worth their weight in silver.
@@RelaxingASMR you know actually, thanks in part to this very video, I became a coin collector and now I collect junk silver aswell as anything else I think is interesting or a good investment. If I can't buy it at face value I always look for deals. In older silver quarters, like the pre-65 washingtons and the standing liberty quarters, I really love the patina, and history.
People actually will pay extra if they have that rainbow toning silver gets in certain conditions ^^
Don’t clean you’re coins plz.
please make more coin videos
Baking soda
haha
you should try to clean those with toothpaste.. :D
+Epatsu never clean silver coins, they look cool tarnished
+silverexplosion yeah i know but he obviously wants to polish those :D
+silverexplosion Personally, I think there is a difference between tarnished silver and caked-on dirty silver. Like my coins to be clean:)
You really shouldn't clean your coins like that. Cleaned coins lose their value and coin collectors can tell when a coin has been cleaned. It's too late now for it to be fixed, but that dropped the value of all cleaned coins you own considerably.
They're only worth its weight in silver, too many junk silver quarters in circulation to have any collectors value
That only applies to sought-after items made of silver or that have silver on them. The coins aren't going to ever sell for more than scrap silver
+YuukiRus Games That may be true for truly collectible coins, but the coins in this video are, and always will be, worth only their weight in silver, dirty or clean. That being the case, I'd rather have my coins as clean as possible. Thanks for watching:)
Fair enough, I mostly just wanted to make sure the awareness was there, especially for the silver dollar, which has increasing value
Do t clean it it! It ruins the value
The term "junk silver" refers to silver coins that do not have collectable value. They are only worth what the price of silver is at that time. No matter how dirty, tarnished, or sparkly they are are, they are only worth current silver prices. Therefor, if I'm going to own them, they must be clean and pleasant to look at:)
@@RelaxingASMR as a collector im offended
Jinger Partin yeah me too, really good condition silver coins can have a very nice premium, he’s acting like all silver circulation coins are junk silver coins