Interesting perspective about the Canadian Cent and what it takes to scrap them. ANSWER: Think bigger than your truck.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/penny-wise/
Magnets and water tables composed of different chemicals will separate the pennies based on their different metal contents. Because pennies have different densities — those minted before 1997 are between 95 percent and 98 percent copper and in the late 1990’s the mint experimented with zinc pennies and then switched to steel because it was more cost effective — steel pennies will be drawn to magnets whereas the zinc and copper pennies will float. Since 2000 the penny has been 94 percent steel, 1.5 percent nickel and 4.5 percent copper plating
henrysmedford wrote:Magnets and water tables composed of different chemicals will separate the pennies based on their different metal contents. Because pennies have different densities — those minted before 1997 are between 95 percent and 98 percent copper and in the late 1990’s the mint experimented with zinc pennies and then switched to steel because it was more cost effective — steel pennies will be drawn to magnets whereas the zinc and copper pennies will float. Since 2000 the penny has been 94 percent steel, 1.5 percent nickel and 4.5 percent copper plating
So my wife said to me what are you doing in the kitchen as I am dumping a zinc,copper and a steel Canadian cent into the sink only to see them all sink.
Engineer wrote:henrysmedford wrote:Magnets and water tables composed of different chemicals will separate the pennies based on their different metal contents. Because pennies have different densities — those minted before 1997 are between 95 percent and 98 percent copper and in the late 1990’s the mint experimented with zinc pennies and then switched to steel because it was more cost effective — steel pennies will be drawn to magnets whereas the zinc and copper pennies will float. Since 2000 the penny has been 94 percent steel, 1.5 percent nickel and 4.5 percent copper plating
So my wife said to me what are you doing in the kitchen as I am dumping a zinc,copper and a steel Canadian cent into the sink only to see them all sink.
Filling a water table with mercury would allow you to float the cents past a magnet. At the end of the table, the copper/zinc would need to be heated enough to boil off any stray mercury, which could then be distilled back into liquid.
A chemist could probably find safer chemicals to work with, but the mercury is an easy example for us to understand.
“It would take thousands of coins, truck loads, to be worth melting down,” he said. “At the end of the day, yes it is probably better to not give [the pennies] back to the government, but there are very few people who have the space or the ability to store them in bulk. Bringing them to a bank or a coin dealer is much easier.”
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