Author Topic: Zinc pennys  (Read 2176 times)

:D i was cleaning my new room and found a bag wait like 200-150 wheat pennys and i was like pennys :D then i dumped them and 2 was silver and i put them on to a magnet and they stuck :D idk there worth but there rare so i can make moneys off it :D

Zinc isn't a great metal, due to it's reactivity, and you'll find that the magnetic coins have nickel in, which is magnetic. As far as I'm aware, no mass-minted coins have any trace of precious metals in, which means no actual silver are in silvers.

No i was like it was the color like how its like reflective grey

Nickel's not a terribly reactive metal, and tends to stay shiny. I had a whole bunch of strips of various metals, until my mom threw them out as garbage.

The "silver" pennies you speak of were mass produced some time in the 40's since copper was needed for the war. They're practically worthless. However, if you find a copper 1943 penny, you could sell it for up to 80,000$.

The  zinc one is dated 1943 :D i might find a 1943 copper one there like 200 of them

Of course the zinc one is, that's why copper 1943's are so rare.

So the zinc are worth nothing D:

I got a nickel from 1942, I got it buying a CD.  :cookieMonster:

Of course the zinc one is, that's why copper 1943's are so rare.
10 cents at most from my understanding.

Oh, and I'm sure it's pennies. Not pennys. I know it's not a great contribution on my part, but damn was it annoying to see "pennys".