Assuming it is a genuine 1 ounce bar, it should be worth whatever one ounce of silver is currently trading for no matter what is stamped into it. Keep in mind that many coin dealers buy for much lower than spot, so it pays to shop around and find the dealer that will pay the most.
What is the current going price for silver???????????
It depends upon the "grade" of the coin (i.e., how much detail is left from when it was orginally stamped at the mint, whether it's "dinged" around the edges, etc...) and to whom you're selling it to! A badly worn 1948 5 peso coin is naturally not going to be worth much more than scrap silver prices, while a pristine MS-66 1948 5 peso coin with a "mint error" is going to be worth far more to a numismatic collector.
Going purely by melt value, a U.S. quarter minted before 1965 is currently worth about $5.50 for the silver (as of 11 January 2013).
The value of a bar of silver will depend on both the weight of the bar and the purity of the silver itself. In general, silver is going for $17-19 per ounce. If you try and sell, you will get slightly less than this because whatever company buys the bar will want to make a profit when they resell it to the next customer. One single bar of silver is going to cost about ten to sixteen dollars. It pays about thirteen fifty for an ounce. It is kind of cheap but it is something.
Check the financial pages of a newspaper or go to a site such as CNNMoney.com to check the daily spot price of silver. It's been in the $13 to $14/oz range recently.
The going rate for this item in good condition is $100
There's no genuine Walking Liberty half with a double-headed eagle. My guess is that you have an altered coin, but you may want to have it examined in person. The good news is that the coin is 90% silver which means it's worth about 1/3 of the going price for an ounce of silver.
Your coin in questions is commonly referred to as a Silver Eagle. At a minimum it will always be worth current value of one ounce of silver. Numismatically it is worth approximately $16.00 Hope this helps. Mgirard
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sd wewe wqzv ara sf a I'm trying to figure out the CW part myself, but I know for a fact that the 925 means that the silver is 925 parts out of 1000 pure silver. 925/1000 is the standard for sterling silver as opposed to the standard of 999.99 for a coin or a bar of silver in order to be used as currency. Often you will see 925 and Italy stamped on silver jewelry. If you do this most likely is real. If someone is going to go to the effort of making counterfeit jewelry they are usually going to do it with gold, so if your silver has a 925 marking chances are its good sterling silver. Hope this helps you out.
The stamp is called a hallmark, and is intended to show how much silver is contained in the item. 825 silver means that the item is made up of 82.5% silver and 17.5% other metals (often nickel or aluminum). 825 silver is a very odd number. Are you sure you are reading it correctly? 925 silver is called "sterling silver." If it is indeed 825, you may have an antique piece that originated in Europe (usually Germany) in the mid-1800s.
There is an eagle on US currency, and holding on to it till the eagle grins is kind of like holding on to it forever, because the eagle is never going to grin.
As of May 2012, The going rate for silver is about $28.00 / oz.
It is about the pigs stealing the eggs, and the birds going to the Mighty Eagle to ask him for help.
Eagles of kill and eat snakes. Going with the eagle.
Silver is actually going up in prices. You may want to try and sell your silver somewhere else.
What is the current going price for silver???????????