You need to follow certain time-tested strategies for a profiteering trade in silver coins. Watch the price movements of gold and silver and try to understand clearly how silver rates change with fluctuations in gold rates. Observe the seasons change patterns of gold rates. Study commercial trading reports. If you already possess silver coins, know their market value up to date update. Buy only silver that has authentic certification. When you buy or sell do it through auction sites or sites set up specifically for trading in silver.
Silver U.S. coins dated 1964 or earlier are still legal tender at face value.
Hi I have also been trying to find the value of these coins because I have a 1986 Liberty Trade Silver coin. Ive done the research and these coins were privately manufactured so they are really only worth the silver value of these coins, and the print on them does not contribute at all to their value.
You have to trade it from Silver or Crystal.
There were no dollar coins minted in the U.S. in 1986.
Silver is a not magnetic metal - the most highly magnetic metal is iron - so no unless the cores of the coins are iron
540 or 560 B.C.
The only silver-dollar sized coins struck in 1877 were Trade Dollars. These coins were made of the same 90% silver alloy as standard silver dollars, but were slightly larger and heavier. They were stuck specifically for use in international trade. A few thousand gold $1coins were also struck in 1877. Their alloy was 90% gold but it included a very small amount of silver and copper for hardness.
Trade dollars were US coins made in silver to trade in the far East. However, your coin, if it is an 1884 Trade Dollar, it is counterfeit. There were only 10 examples minted that year, all of them are known. So, when it comes to value, the only value your coin can have is if it is minted in real silver, if it is minted in real silver, it is worth however much silver is in your coin. If it is silver plated lead, or silver plated copper, or non-silver alloy like "nickel silver" your coin is essentially worthless.
Your 1884 Trade Dollar is a copy or fake with little or no value. There are only 10 known 1884 Trade Dollars and there all Proof coins
No, the Aztecs did not use silver coins as currency. They used a system of barter trade, where goods were exchanged for other goods. Cocoa beans, cloth, and tools were commonly used as currency in Aztec society.
All coins come from a mint. Casino coins are sometimes solid silver.
The Actual Silver Weight (except for Trade Dollars) of one dollar U.S. coins from 1840 to 1935 is .77344oz of pure silver.