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Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 2, 2020 9:37 am
by SMLCHNG
The average one will last between 28 and 30 years.
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 2, 2020 10:56 am
by SeattleParrotHead
Marriage
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 2, 2020 10:59 am
by LIPH
coin
(I read that somewhere many years ago. In fact, it may have been 28-30 years ago.
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 2, 2020 11:34 am
by SeattleParrotHead
I've been married 36+ years... I have no coin.

Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 3, 2020 10:16 am
by SeattleParrotHead
Pickup truck
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 3, 2020 1:52 pm
by Saltx3
SeattleParrotHead wrote: ↑August 2, 2020 11:34 am
I've been married 36+ years... I have no coin.
37 on 6/11/20 -- me neither
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 3, 2020 4:11 pm
by PetalMel
mobile home.
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 3, 2020 7:39 pm
by SMLCHNG
LIPH wrote: ↑August 2, 2020 10:59 am
coin
(I read that somewhere many years ago. In fact, it may have been 28-30 years ago.

Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 4, 2020 12:48 am
by Bicycle Bill
So what happens to them after 28-30 years? It's not like they dissolve, or the government recalls them and replaces them with newly minted coins. Do they just get lost, or just hoarded by collectors?
I grant you, you don't see too many pennies from prior to 1959 around
(when they switched the design on the reverse from the 'grains of wheat' to the Lincoln Memorial), but there are still some in circulation. Ditto the Jefferson nickels. And about the only reason you don't see dimes, quarters, or half-dollars from prior to 1963 is because that was when they switched them from silver to a copper core clad in silver (later nickel), so people are hoarding them
(or have already melted them down) for the value of the silver in them.
But with a few exception
(such as the bi-centennial quarter, half-dollars, and dollar coins — again, most of which are in the hands of collectors or hoarders), any US coin minted since 1965 has as much chance of being in circulation now, 55 years later, as one released from the mint just yesterday.
-"BB"-
Re: Mindbender #1216
Posted: August 4, 2020 6:27 am
by Saltx3
Bicycle Bill wrote: ↑August 4, 2020 12:48 am
So what happens to them after 28-30 years? It's not like they dissolve, or the government recalls them and replaces them with newly minted coins. Do they just get lost, or just hoarded by collectors?
I grant you, you don't see too many pennies from prior to 1959 around
(when they switched the design on the reverse from the 'grains of wheat' to the Lincoln Memorial), but there are still some in circulation. Ditto the Jefferson nickels. And about the only reason you don't see dimes, quarters, or half-dollars from prior to 1963 is because that was when they switched them from silver to a copper core clad in silver (later nickel), so people are hoarding them
(or have already melted them down) for the value of the silver in them.
But with a few exception
(such as the bi-centennial quarter, half-dollars, and dollar coins — again, most of which are in the hands of collectors or hoarders), any US coin minted since 1965 has as much chance of being in circulation now, 55 years later, as one released from the mint just yesterday.
-"BB"-
Is this why we're having a coin shortage right now
