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When it's going good

Keep detecting! I got out to my new favorite place and set off to grid another area next to where I found all the foreign coins the other night. Got a 2 bar strength signal between 83-89 VDI at 6 inches so I dug. Baaaaazing! I finally dug my first real silver quarter. 1920 S Standing liberty. I can't believe how well it cleaned up and there's literally no scuff or worn marks on it. It was the only coin we found the whole 3 hours we hunted but it just confirmed there's more like it up there. Going to hopefully hit it again tomorrow. Thanks for looking.

Dave
 
Nice one . Congrats!:clapping:
Looks like that one hasn't ciculated much , minty:thumbup:
 
I have hardly ever seen a coin as a neat as this one. Unfortunately I cleaned it (just used running water) and was told it went from an AU to a XF by a coin dealer today:cry:

I don't get it. It's 92 years old, has been in the ground probably all that time given it has zero wear, I washed it off and lost half the value. If I was buying a coin I would want the one that had a shine.
 
It didn't tarnish at all? I've cleaned cull silver coins with baking soda and water and they come out super bright like yours. But every silver I find is browned or have some stain on them that won't rinse off.
 
Aarong81 said:
It didn't tarnish at all? I've cleaned cull silver coins with baking soda and water and they come out super bright like yours. But every silver I find is browned or have some stain on them that won't rinse off.

Nope, no tarnish at all. I got home, ran some water on it to clean the dirt off, dried it with a soft towel and that's what I got. I was literally amazed at the coin. It's like whoever lost it must have gotten it from the bank in 1920 and then lost it in the dirt that afternoon.
 
She's a beauty! BIG congratulations. It's still got it's mint luster on it. I wouldn't clean any silver coin with anything else but soap and water. Have you checked the value of it? Good going and HH, Nancy
 
Looks like it just came out off the shelf. cch
 
[size=large]ya sure the coin dealer wasn't downgrading to get a better price for himself? they aren't the most honest people at times.that coin looks to be walked out of the bank and dropped in the park. like winnipeg said. not circulated much. i would add, "if at all ". next time just say grandpa left it too you.

HH[/size]
 
Thanks Monte! It made me smile to know that I could impress you with one of my finds. Is it worth getting it graded professionally? There's a 1920s that has the Full Head that is listed on a site for over 19k. I'm sure mine is just a regular coin but one can dream.
 
That's a nice one! I just dug a 1921 in near unworn condition (F-12 condition, actually) about a month or two ago. I knew right away I had some money in my hand, because a few years later the coin was re-designed so they wouldn't wear so fast. I needed some fast money so I sold it to a local dealer who is more fair than others around here. He gave me $150 for it, which I think is fair since the guy has to pay rent and all that. My coin book is older and it had it at I think $250 or so maybe from memory. Later I figured out how you can check how much items sold for on Ebay where the bidding has ended and found my year, my shape...was being sold at around $350 to $450. Oh well, my fault for not using a newer coin book, and next time I know how to check Ebay to see how much stuff has sold for. I'm still happy with the $150 because I really needed the cash that week for some issues, and besides I was always told to never look a gift horse in the mouth.

Far as I'm concerned coins are nice to keep in a collection, but a good picture is all I really care to have for the most part to remember it by. Sure, I hang onto all my copper coins and such since most aren't worth anything, but silver is always paying a high X face value even if it's a common date, so when I get enough of a pile going I cash it in. Down the road when money ain't as tight I'll hang onto my silver too. Usually I have a nice pile I intend to keep, but then something comes up and I end up cashing all the common dates in for the X times face value amount.

I just can't understand why that coin is that shiny though. I shine my common date silver because I think it's stupid not to have silver look pristine IMO, but the stuff that has some value other than face value...only water and soap. If you used just water and soap then no reason they can even tell it's been cleaned. Just don't tell them you dug it out of the ground because then they'll know you washed it off. Don't even mention you washed it with soap and water, because far as I know there is no way to tell that's been done and I thought was an acceptable practice without degrading the coin's value? For my common date stuff I rub the coin between my fingers with a little baking soda and water and it shines them right up. If they have some really stubborn black stains that that won't take off for some reason, then I use electrolysis on them and it will bust anything off them real quick. A great way to clean silver rings too that have nooks and crannies you can't reach.

PS- I have to agree that I've never dug a coin that shiney. They always have at least a few darker or stain spots on them. You sure you only used dishwashing soap and water with a non-abbrassive towel? And was the soap non-abbrassive?
 
"
PS- I have to agree that I've never dug a coin that shiney. They always have at least a few darker or stain spots on them. You sure you only used dishwashing soap and water with a non-abbrassive towel? And was the soap non-abbrassive?"

I took it out of my pocket covered in dirt, poured a big gob of palmolive dish soap on it, rubbed it to get the dirt off and rinsed it in warm water. Grabbed the nearest dish towel on the counter and dried it off. That's it. I'm a newbie at this. It was only the 5th silver coin I'd ever dug and 3 of them were dug in the days preceeding finding this one. I did not consider whether or not this was a valuable coin prior to cleaning it. I'm considering sending it to ANACS but I only have the single coin to get certified and I'm not sure if they take only one and whether or not it's worth getting done.
 
Thats how my common date cull silver coins look after using baking soda. Somehow the dealer thought it was improperly cleaned. They probably look for age toning when inspecting them which doesn't rinse off.
 
If you didn't clean it with anything but soap and water you should be good and didn't destroy it's value. Just don't tell the dealer you dug it out of the ground, as many collectable coins are shiney like that that haven't been dug. But if for some odd reason it just "lusters" too much to where they are suspicious, a trick is to set the coin out on your porch outside or something where the weather and rain can get at it for a while. Sooner or later it'll lose that luster and look more "realistic". Then bring it to a dealer and see what they say. That is, if you do want to sell it. If you don't, just keep it as is because you know the truth that it wasn't cleaned to remove the tarnish.
 
I'm guessing it may have "escaped" someone's collection and was recently dropped. I say this because it brings back the memory of a guy who found an AU gold dollar from the early 1900's in a TOT LOT!
 
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