2005 Buffalo Nickel Value

 admin

Shop a bunch of 2005 Buffalo Nickel Value Chart and similar products available for sale this week. Featuring 2005 Buffalo Nickel Value Chart in stock and ready for shipping here online! Nearly 900 million 2005 bison variant nickels were produced in total from the Philadelphia and Denver mints, almost 100 million more than the next most-produced coin of the series (Ocean in View). If taken from circulation, the coin is. The vast majority of 2005 Buffalo Nickels were released into circulation, where they immediately lost their pristine condition and their premium collector value. Only a tiny fraction will be set aside in original rolls, such as this roll of 40 original 2005 Buffalo Nickels in Mint-fresh Brilliant Uncirculated condition. Rare nickel NEW by: gage i found a 2005 buffalo nickel that is d. And on the back where the buffalo is it is painted like not hand painted but pressed painted. The buffalo is brown, had white hoofs, horns, its shaded,and has like standing on green grass and then it gets lighter going up to like an orange. Ive never seen anything like this. 2005-D Bison Jefferson Nickel Value. 2005-D Jefferson Bison value is from 5 cents to.10 cents in grades almost uncirculated (AU) or less, and.50 cents plus for uncirculated raw examples. Can be worth over $46 if graded by PCGS or NGC in MS67.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article
Eye for detail pays off big (mint error with 2005 Buffalo Nickel)
Citizen's Voice (Wilkes-Barre PA) ^ 7/24/2005 Mike Cherney

Posted on 07/24/2005 8:42:52 PM PDT by Born Conservative

In a cabin-like home on a typical suburban road three blocks from downtown Dallas borough, one avid coin collector left his mark on the coin collecting world in March.

It began with dozens of new 2005 buffalo nickels and a hard-to-see mistake.

It's hard to confirm whether 58-year-old Jim Davis, a Dallas man who has been collecting coins since the 1960s, was the first to discover a manufacturing error on some of the nickels: the buffalo's innermost hind leg appeared to be floating in mid-air, detached from the rest of its body.

Davis believes he was first. For a collector who has thousands of coins worth perhaps $100,000, ranging from a 1748 imperial Spanish dollar coin from Mexico to a gold $20 U.S. coin from 1924, the discovery gives Davis a sense of self-satisfaction only an avid hobbyist would know.

'It is something that people will remember,' said Davis, as he sat in his kitchen with two dozen antique coins sprawled on the table in front of him. 'People are coming up to Dallas and saying, 'Did you know there's a nickel out there with a detached leg? The guy lives right here in Dallas who found that.'

Davis, who keeps his collection in a safe deposit box in the bank, found 21 buffalo nickels with a detached leg in the three 40-coin rolls he bought from the mint soon after they were issued. He has since sold nine of them on eBay, one for more than $200.

Two dozen of the coins were up for auction on eBay on Wednesday, ranging from a $1 starting bid with some bids going as high as $130. Davis said the coins were featured on the Home Shopping Network - and sold out in 15 minutes.

'I'm amazed with what he finds,' said Davis' 38-year-old son Scott. 'I don't know how he does it. I spend my change, I don't sit there and look at it.'

Davis has been staring at his change ever since he began coin collecting. It's a good way to find rare coins, he said, because a lot of people - especially older folks - don't know they have a rare coin, so they go out and spend it.

'He'll sit here for eight hours with a little magnifying glass up to his eyeballs,' said his wife Maggie. 'When we're on vacation, he keeps all the change wherever we go, and we go back to the hotel and that's what he does for the rest of the night. No dancing for us.'

When Davis discovered the coins, he said he sent the news to Coin World, a weekly newspaper for coin collectors, which ran an article on May 23 using Davis' information. He also had the coin verified by ANACS, a coin certification company.

An employee at ANACS said the company does not keep records on who was the first person to certify a new coin error. And an editor at Coin World could not confirm Davis was the first to discover the defect.

Whether Davis was first or not, some coin enthusiasts said similar defects are commonplace.

The floating leg is the result of a die error, explained Fred Weinberg, owner of Fred Weinberg & Co., a rare error coin dealer from Encino, Calif. The die, the metal plate that stamps the coin to create the image, was probably polished last minute by the mint as they tried to perfect the coin, he said.

'Things like this occur every year on all different denominations of coins,' he said. 'If you give me your pocket change, I can find something wrong with almost every coin.'

Uncirculated 2005 buffalo nickel value

One reason for the hype surrounding the 2005 nickel, Weinberg said, is its similarity to a 1937 buffalo nickel, where a die error erased an entire leg of the buffalo. Depending on the condition, that coin is worth anywhere between $500 and $7,500, Weinberg said.

No one knows how many detached-leg nickels were minted, so any future worth of the coin will be based on how many are actually found - some could be lost in circulation - and whether anybody cares.

Bill Reese, a North Port, Fla. coin collector, is taking that chance.

'Any coin is worth what somebody is willing to pay for it,' said Reese, who is collecting the nickels and sold a couple on eBay for $100. 'Who knows? I'm gambling that it's going to be worth money.'

For Davis, it is exciting to take part in an error discovery, but he said the most interesting thing about coin collecting is the history.

'Maybe Abraham Lincoln had that in his pocket one time,' he said while examining a three-cent piece from 1852. 'Maybe he made a bet with it, or maybe he bought a beer.'

TOPICS:Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS:buffalonickel
1posted on 07/24/2005 8:42:53 PM PDTby Born Conservative

2posted on 07/24/2005 8:44:03 PM PDTby Born Conservative('If not us, who? And if not now, when? - Ronald Reagan)
[Post Reply Private Reply To 1 View Replies]

Unfortunately things are so easy to fake these days, people will likely reproduce his discovery and ruin its overall value.
If you're going to collect stamps or coins, do it for the appreciation of what it is, not what it's worth.


3posted on 07/24/2005 8:48:49 PM PDTby SteveMcKing
[Post Reply Private Reply To 1 View Replies]

I thought it was illegal to be a numismatist in Texas...


4posted on 07/24/2005 10:12:42 PM PDTby snarks_when_bored
[Post Reply Private Reply To 1 View Replies]

its funny I just got interested in coins for the first time since I was a kid and bought a 2005 eagle dollar and the 230th Anniversary silver Marines dollar, 2 pretty coins.


5posted on 07/24/2005 10:15:37 PM PDTby Cougar66(If Sonny had EZ Pass, 'The Godfather' would have been a completely different movie)
[Post Reply Private Reply To 4 View Replies]

Good luck with your new hobby...


6posted on 07/24/2005 10:18:38 PM PDTby snarks_when_bored
[Post Reply Private Reply To 5 View Replies]

thanks snarks


New 2005 Buffalo Nickel Value

7posted on 07/24/2005 10:21:04 PM PDTby Cougar66(If Sonny had EZ Pass, 'The Godfather' would have been a completely different movie)
[Post Reply Private Reply To 6 View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article
Value
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson

CoinTrackers.com has estimated the 2005 D Kansas State Quarter value at an average of 25 cents, one in certified mint state (MS+) could be worth $1. (see details)...

Type:Kansas State Quarter
Year:2005
Mint Mark: D
Face Value: 0.25 USD
Total Produced: 300,000,000 [?]
Silver Content: 0%
Numismatic Value: 25 cents to $1.10
Value: As a rough estimate of this coins value you can assume this coin in average condition will be valued at somewhere around 25 cents, while one in certified mint state (MS+) condition could bring as much as $1 at auction. This price does not reference any standard coin grading scale. So when we say average, we mean in a similar condition to other coins issued in 2005, and mint state meaning it is certified MS+ by one of the top coin grading companies. [?].

Additional Info: This quarter was released to the public in August 2005 and was designed by Norman Nemeth. It also has a Buffalo or American Bison on the front, along with the State Flower the Sunflower. All the state quarters have the words E pluribus Unum on the reverse bottom middle.


More of the Same

Buffalo Nickel Value

All US Quarters

Most Valuable Coins by Type...

2005 Buffalo Nickel Value

[Top of Page]

**When we say that 300,000,000, of these coins were produced or minted in 2005 this number doesn't always match the actual circulation count for this coin. The numbers come from the United States mint, and they don't reflect coins that have been melted, destroyed, or those that have never been released. Please keep that in mind.

[Top of Page]

2005 Bison Nickel Value

***Price subject to standard supply and demand laws, dealer premiums, and other market variations. Prices represent past values fetched at online auctions, estate sales, certified coins being sold by dealers, and user submitted values. While we wholeheartedly try to give honest price estimates there are many factors besides appearance, metal content, and rarity that help make up the coins overall value.Call or visit your local coin dealer for more information.

We use user submitted pictures please read that article if you are interested in adding your own.

[Top of Page]