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sixgun

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Posts posted by sixgun

  1. A 1 kg bar is not really big, it is pretty standard. A 100 oz bar is big.
    It seems there was a time when silver bars were drilled out and tungsten put in - but it has never been during my time of buying bars. It certainly is an issue with gold bars and one of the reasons I don't buy them. Perhaps one day we will see tungsten filled silver bars again.

    Basic bullion coins like Maples and Britannias are at the cheaper end of the price range. Maples have had a bad rep in the past as they almost always would develop milk spot. I haven't followed this too closely but a few years ago the RCM said they had altered their production process to stop this. Stackers generally don't like milk spot and so a coin that is very likely to develop it won't command the same price. It ceases to be a collector type coin. Britannias also have milk spot problems. 

    There are loads of Brits and Maples in the hands of members - there is nothing special about them - unless you are looking at one of the basic bullion type coins that have something special about them then why would anyone want to pay extra.

    Personally i am keen on different silver bars - especially vintage bars. When i have the spare cash i like to get them - i collect them. 

    The 100 oz and 5kg silver bars are quite a price. This means fewer members have the spare cash to buy. The prices won't go so high as there is less competition.

    The relative price of bars to coins has fluctuated over time. Bars used to be cheaper here - then they get a bit more expensive. On average I wouldn't say the difference is big but at the moment it would not surprise me if you have seen the smaller bars going for higher prices. Perhaps its the fashion. 

  2. 18 minutes ago, James32 said:

    Excellent price...no idea what it was but seller is usually Excellent 

    In the email it said

    10 oz of Coins & poured silver £240 Inc SD

    Yes it was a good deal despite silver having been stomped on - i was too busy swimming at the pool to notice this one - it is getting warmer now and warm enough for me to swim.

  3. 41 minutes ago, Roy said:

    Now, as to the bottom hallmark, I can only offer my ideas.

    It looks like a 'handshake', I detect Masonic vibes 😇

    The 3 triangles may represent Air, Fire and Water (common in symbology).

    Perhaps a batch of custom pieces were created for a group, society, members club etc.?

    Indeed the Masonic angle came to my mind when looking at the triangular mark.
    I thought i would wear this to show i was a member of the Illuminati.

  4. Any ideas on the hallmark at the bottom of this piece?
    The 2000 is presumably the year 2000 but the Z year mark is 1999. This bears the Sheffield assay office rose and the crown for gold with a 375 purity. The IBB is International Bullion and Metal Brokers. So all of these are covered other than the almost triangular shape at the bottom of the piece.

    image.png.38b637da2220f879bef76963cef7287d.png

     

    image.png.193755c9011bb40695e4bb6b3a356973.png

  5. I can't add anything. This bar is shown on the All Engelhard website, with a production run estimated at under 500 bars. Once I tried to track down some SilverTowne mint serial numbers - as I remember I actually contacted them directly - no records kept. It does make you wonder what the serial numbers are about if the manufacturer isn't keeping them, it's not as though that is a difficult thing to do. One could guess the 1980's and you would probably be right.

    image.thumb.png.f117a7d3ca218e15cb1751973c65228e.png

  6. On 20/03/2024 at 14:10, SiCole said:

    I would check the commodity code they put on the export docs and reference it against what it needs to be. Hopefully you can rectify it with the importer.

    Royal Mint just exports gold and silver coins - surely they couldn't get the commodity code wrong - i mean how many of these codes are they using?

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