Buying Silver Bullion Vs Junk Silver



Concerns and considerations when deciding to purchase silver bullion or junk silver.

Comments

  1. Which mint made that Buffalo round
  2. Great video 😎 Your channel rocks! I just posted 2 kick ass video melting gold Bars, and how to stack faster, cheaper and even free. I'm sure you will love. Pls let me know what you think. Tnx and keep on stacking😀
  3. What part of the country do they pronounce the word 'bullion' (bull yun), ...bull yon? Alabama maybe? Good information here, especially for someone new to acquiring silver as an investment or simply as 'insurance'. Within the last 10-15 years, the term 'junk' silver is now referred to as 'constitutional' silver. MANY silver dealers, coin collectors, and coin shops prefer the term constitutional silver to junk silver, for obvious reasons.
  4. People put tungsten in ten ounce bars? Care to share your source for this information? It's well known that in the 80's (30+ years ago) some 100 oz. bars were, indeed, drilled and filled. But if you buy new bars from reputable vendors, large bars are completely safe. And 100 oz. bars are the most economical (low premium) choice as vendors routinely sell them for .39 or .49 over spot. Once you have what you consider a decent position in coins, rounds, and smaller bars, I'd recommend switching to 100 oz. bars. In addition to getting more silver for your money, your argument about fewer pieces to verify is even more true with large bars. Rather than test/verify 20 5 oz. bars, the buyer would only need to test one 100 oz. bars.
  5. I grabbed a bunch of 1/10 oz rounds of 99.9 and halves also at 99.9 . How do you feel about fractional that's 99.9 compared to 90%? The math seems to favor the other person in a transaction towards me losing silver and goods purchased with junk silver. Just my 2cents.
  6. Thankyou, good vid.
  7. Great points! Thanks for sharing.


Additional Information:

Visibility: 1629

Duration: 7m 14s

Rating: 55