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Silver dime doesn't always shine

Picketwire

Well-known member
After tumbling to clean my dimes and quarters, upon inspection I found a 1946 and 1962 Rosevelt. I have found silver coins before that were obvious when I first saw them but these were as dirty as all the others. They didn't even stand out after tumbling. Only when I had a stack of dimes and looked at them end wise did the silver stand out from the ones with copper showing. It pays to check.
 
That's good news, hopefully you can remember where they were dug and can return to the site.
 
Nice couple of saves. I dug what turned out to be a Merc. the other day that had clay grunge all over it and as I was about to pocket as a clad dime I noticed one speck of shiny. After a pretty hard spit rubbing I got a faint hint of Mercury's head. It was also from an area I had never dug silver from so it almost made the clad pile. Would have spotted it, though, after tumbling, I guess. Had em come out black, but never a tan hard grunge like that one. HH jim tn
 
Where I am silver comes out silver, might be a bit blackish if soil is odd.

It takes me some time but I keep a list of odd mint struck coins and check each one before putting in rolls etc., some of those can be worth a chunk of change!!!
 
Where I am silver comes out silver, might be a bit blackish if soil is odd.
Pretty much the same with the silver here, too. Blackish coins seem to be most common for me when recovering any from stone/rocky kind of driveways and demo sites that had some amount of blacktop. Not sure what the deal was with the one I mentioned above, as it still hasn't cleaned up all that well using soda and vinegar. Finally got a date of 1919 off it. HH jim tn
 
Some of the silver in my town comes out with something like a calcified shell covering it. Buggers to clean... like you, I've had a few surprise silvers in the clad I tumble. Nice saves!
 
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