Jump to content

Diggin' The Campground (update)


Recommended Posts

9 hours ago, Jeff McClendon said:

There have been some Philadelphia Mint error 2000 nickels that were accidentally made on a copper penny sized planchet.

That is what I was hoping.  Those wrong planchet errors happen from time to time and as you note are valuable.  In the past (maybe present, too) the US Mint will stamp coins for other countries and occasionally their planchets work their way into one of our presses.  But more common our just our own planchets.

That 25% nickel, 75% copper alloy is apparently pretty vulnerable to chemicals in some soils.  I think some tree leaves in particular are hard on them.  But fertilizer is another suspect, too, as mh9162013 points out.  Freshwater lakes seem particularly bad, not surprisingly.  A couple years ago I posted a photo of a coin (modern quarter) where the Ni alloy outer layers were completely eaten away, leaving only the copper core.  I found that in a very small artificial pond at a friends house which was loaded with decaying leaves.

Thanks for the photo, F350.  I was hoping....

  • Like 2
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites


28 minutes ago, GB_Amateur said:

That is what I was hoping.  Those wrong planchet errors happen from time to time and as you note are valuable.  In the past (maybe present, too) the US Mint will stamp coins for other countries and occasionally their planchets work their way into one of our presses.  But more common our just our own planchets.

That 25% nickel, 75% copper alloy is apparently pretty vulnerable to chemicals in some soils.  I think some tree leaves in particular are hard on them.  But fertilizer is another suspect, too, as mh9162013 points out.  Freshwater lakes seem particularly bad, not surprisingly.  A couple years ago I posted a photo of a coin (modern quarter) where the Ni alloy outer layers were completely eaten away, leaving only the copper core.  I found that in a very small artificial pond at a friends house which was loaded with decaying leaves.

Thanks for the photo, F350.  I was hoping....

I was too, but am always suspect of thinking any of my finds might be valuable at this stage ? I'm sure it's some sort of chemical change. I did see the nickels struck on a penny planchet, there are photos of them somewhere but they look nothing like this. They're all hacked off and nasty albeit valuable. I'm still gonna keep it as a curio.

One of the things that makes this forum great is that an expert will humor a neophyte with patient advice and respect. I hope to be one of those eventually. Thanks.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, F350Platinum said:

One of the things that makes this forum great is that an expert will humor a neophyte with patient advice and respect. I hope to be one of those eventually. Thanks.

Chuck (GB_Amateur) is definitely a coin expert. I have had the pleasure of spending a day hunting with him and "talking" detectors. He is also a super nice guy that I would hunt with anytime.

Everyone on this forum has different physical abilities, hunting environments, target preferences and at least in my case......addictions (gold nugget prospecting). So, there is absolutely nothing wrong or lowly about hunting for US clad. If it makes sense to hunt for clad, it can be just as fun as hunting for anything else and it pays for the experience immediately.

The Equinox you have with its single digit notching and simultaneous multi frequency operation, makes cherry picking for US clad, specific denominations of coins, silver coins and gold jewelry super easy and accurate to do. Since the Equinox rarely up or down averages target ID numbers in normal to mineralized turf (black sand infested beaches are another story entirely), notching will be extremely accurate even on deeper targets. Sometimes when I am in a sea of aluminum trash where my other detectors refuse to go, I just set up a simple US coin pattern and see what I can find. I have found some really nice gold and silver jewelry by doing that too. 

Conversely, not digging pull-tabs which can hit between 11 and 19 depending on what kind they are on the Equinox, WILL result in missed gold jewelry if there is any present in that target ID range.........So cherry picking compromises are good sometimes and so is hunting for aluminum/gold.

  • Like 5
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

14 hours ago, Jeff McClendon said:

Conversely, not digging pull-tabs which can hit between 11 and 19 depending on what kind they are on the Equinox, WILL result in missed gold jewelry if there is any present in that target ID range.........So cherry picking compromises are good sometimes and so is hunting for aluminum/gold.

It would not be needed if the public could read. ?

Junk.jpg.40ab22ae7c01f466ae776233385127bf.jpg

 

  • Like 2
  • Haha 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

    I've heard a few "urban legends" of people putting them in the can after opening, (both kinds) and getting them caught in their throat!!? But at least they didn't litter!! ???

  • Like 1
  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...