The Secret Life of Pennies...

And other coins, but mainly pennies.

I typically count my change at the end of the day. Important thing to do. Because at the end of the month most of it goes into the Coin Star machine.

Anyways, I am shocked by the strange way some coins have fared, despite their date.

Some coins are very new. Maybe a year old at most. And they look like they have been thru h*ll.

But that is not the weirdest thing. Just tonight, I looked at my change. And I saw a 1993 penny that looked almost new. Accounting for the fact most of 2019 is yet to come, I assume something made in 1993 is 25 years old (April-December, i.e.). How could a 1993 penny look brand new?

Then again, I have a 2018 penny. And it looks like it has been to Hades and back.

What gives with these counterintuitive (to use a big word) and conflicting results?

:):):slight_smile:

Maybe it spent a long time in a piggy bank.

Someone bought a new sofa?

I guess there must be some people who empty the pockets of their pants before they throw them into the washer!

Pennies can be shiny for quite a long time, iiiffff they’re protected from the elements. I don’t know the circumstances for coins exactly, but copper can be shiny and coppery for a long time.

Remember, putting dissimilar metals together can enhance their corrosion ability, and pennies are just the thinnest copper plating over a zinc core.

I don’t understand the importance of counting your change at the end of the day. Are you keeping a tally of it and then seeing if it matches the Coin Star tally? If the Coin Star is off (according to you), what are you going to do about it?

I have seen this lots of times. Many of them look very discolored and corroded. Is there like a conspiracy to dump millions of pennies in acid and then spread them around in circulation?

I just don’t have the time or energy to spend to disfigure large numbers of coins. Do other people?

I do not know the OP’s age, but assumed she was going through the change.

Pfffft. That doesn’t even make cents.

Dollars to donuts!

At first, I read the title as ** “The Secret Life of Penis…”** :eek:

A penny for your thoughts.

This is why we need to bring back the half penny.

I see the same thing with proper (UK) pennies. Some are years old and shiny, which I assume spent a long time sitting in a clean, dry coin bag or change jar. Some new ones look as if they’ve been run over, kicked across the etc. And they probably have been, before some scavenger picks them up.

Someone might have dropped the old grimy 1993 penny into Taco Bell sauce. Someone once told me to put an old penny in Taco Bell hot sauce to see what it was doing to my insides. The old penny came out of the sauce looking brand new.

Zinc pennies don’t hold up nearly as well as the old copper ones. Especially when exposed to weather. That’s why you can see new ones that are really bad looking. As for old pennies looking new, they may have been cleaned, sat in a piggy bank (lots of people never spend them, just throw them in a jar), or even “rescued” from someone’s coin collection.