English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Ive heard that you could buy a container of dirt that was dug up and scanned (so the company and you were sure that there'd be at least 10 coins in the container) and you go through the dirt and clean up the coins yourself.
Since then ive been unable to find the company that sells them, anyone know a similar company that does this?

2007-09-16 11:54:50 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Games & Recreation Hobbies & Crafts

5 answers

It is an old scam, like the raw emeralds in dirt. No one sells or buys coins this way, the offerer is just buying cheap uncleaned coins and putting them in his own dirt. Even when the coins are found, they are frequently are in pots, not dirt, and any found in dirt are quickly wiped to see what it is.

Uncleaned coins may be an inexpensive way to start in ancient coins, but is expensive long term. Uncleaned used to mean that, now it simply means junk ancients in 99% of the cases. They will be coins not cleaned further, since anyone who knows what they are doing knows the coin, and knows it is valueless, so therefor should be sold to suckers, (new collectors).

If you wish to begin collecting ancient coins, the best way is to buy a few inexpensive coins from Ebay or (better) pick boxes from a show. Then buy a few books that give you information on them, so you can better appreciate them and learn what eras interest you. The books you buy will be the cheapest investment you ever make in the hobby.

Let me know if you ever have any questions.

2007-09-20 09:29:55 · answer #1 · answered by medoraman 3 · 0 0

Interesting marketing for sure. I did some searching but no luck in finding such an offer.

It's easy to buy uncleaned ancient coins inexpensively - for maybe a couple of bucks or so per coin. Serious collectors of this material advise against it, saying you aren't likely to find anything rare.

I take a different view. If you're new to the subject of ancient coins, maybe a few of these tattered old bronze pieces would be an okay way to start. You could carry them in your pocket and not worry about impairing their value. You could have fun when you buy something by having a few of these in your hand along with your normal coins. Just mutter something like, " uh oh, can't use those,,, forgot to clear out my pockets after my last time travel vacation..." That would be if you're as weird as me, which you probably aren't.

2007-09-19 02:07:52 · answer #2 · answered by CoinTrain 4 · 0 0

Sorry, I have been collecting coins for a long time and have not heard of this, at least here in the U.S.. I know from time to time dealers will sell ancients, in bulk not cleaned. Most end up as low grade coins and usually are copper. I have seen no ads lately in any of the coin papers, such as the weekly Numismatic News, Coin World or monthly World coin News for bulk ancients. Sorry, this is the best I can do.

2007-09-16 13:12:48 · answer #3 · answered by Taiping 7 · 1 0

howdy, its a sturdy, stable quesiton. you're authentic, technically it could be under "Antiques, neumastics" yet this works ok, You recommend like Roman funds, authentic? because of the fact they are so darn straightforward! each and every time you dig a hollow in any usa close to there, its became into an archeological dig. Rome would not have an underground bus or rail device because of the fact each and every time they have all started, its became right into a dig! maximum Roman funds are copper, some silver, and an extremely few are gold. The purity is doubtful- alloying became into primitve, if any. some have been of bronze. The funds from 200 years in the past, are greater like "super Grandfathers funds" and characteristic greater useful documentation, and are greater psycholgically "actual"

2016-11-14 15:20:22 · answer #4 · answered by trippi 4 · 0 0

try acient
cheap coinsters.com

2007-09-16 12:02:23 · answer #5 · answered by Sasori Uchiha 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers