Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:You can sell them to a scrap yard. The copper in the coins is standardized, so they have nothing to fear.
Here is a tip: Never let them unload your scrap metal unless you know exactly how much per pound/ per ton they are going to pay for it first.
I learned that the hard way, I had almost a ton of scrap copper metal flashings in my trailer. I phoned ahead and was told they would pay so much.... only to have them tell me the price dropped while I was being unloaded!!I got clipped for about $600
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Better yet, sell them to other people who will be searching for copper "bullion" cents. Most likely you will fetch a higher price that way.
knibloe wrote:The only thing that I was thinking is: How do they know they have been sorted correctly and that I didn't mix in some zinc for the heck of it. They are not going to check the dates on every single coin. What will make it easy for them to want to accept the coins?
Also, for $600 I would have reloaded the whole load.
knibloe wrote:I have been wondering lately:
When the melt ban is lifted and I have several tons of pennies to dispose of who will buy them. How will the scrap yard know to trust me when I say that they are all copper?
NiBullionCu wrote:Jackson Metals
They were sorting and melting prior to the ban.
They lobbied for an exemption and didn't get one.
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2007/11 ... t_ban.html
Jackson Metals believes it can make a profit and save the U.S. Mint more than $18 million annually through a plan to sift through roughly 5 billion pennies a year and cull high-copper-content coins...
While it waits for a verdict on its plan to pinch pennies from pennies, Jackson Metals has kept its workers busy combing through Canadian nickels to find coins minted between 1946 and 1981 that were made of pure nickel and are currently worth 14.3 U.S. cents.
They've also been sorting through $14 million worth of half-dollar coins from throughout the country to cull silver coins made before 1964.
Note: article is from November of 2007
DebtFreeMe wrote:A question I've been thinking about is; if the penny is removed from general circulation, and the law on melting pennies is removed, don't you think that the treasury itself will melt as much of its own stock in pennies that it can, and flood the copper market with this supply of "new" copper, thus collapsing the price of copper?
Wondering what other peoples thoughts are on this...
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:You can sell them to a scrap yard. The copper in the coins is standardized, so they have nothing to fear.
Here is a tip: Never let them unload your scrap metal unless you know exactly how much per pound/ per ton they are going to pay for it first.
I learned that the hard way, I had almost a ton of scrap copper metal flashings in my trailer. I phoned ahead and was told they would pay so much.... only to have them tell me the price dropped while I was being unloaded!!I got clipped for about $600
![]()
![]()
Better yet, sell them to other people who will be searching for copper "bullion" cents. Most likely you will fetch a higher price that way.
TwoAndAHalfCents wrote:
I doubt the treasury has any stock of copper pennies. They stopped making them 30 years ago. If anyone has a huge stock of pennies it would be the Federal Reserve and those would just be recent 2010 and 2011 zincs.
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