Thanks Kevin
Shot placement is King, penetration is Queen, but a wide wound channel is the Ace in the hole.
Cinhil wrote:Not only do I collect coins and silver bullion, I also work through a great financial adviser and have been able to earn very good returns through his company over the past few years. Investments in stocks are risky without a good adviser. I also have diversified my portfolio and and have several baskets where I have invested. Some of those investments are in and IRA and other personalized retirement accounts which carry minimal risk and guaranteed minimum pay out based on your investment. If you would like more info you could pm me and I will give more details. And yes, you do not make money anymore by keeping it in a bank, you used to be able to but the days of 6 1/4% interest and higher have been over for nearly 15 years. There are much better options out there and many of them offer decent fluidity.
Daeyel wrote:Oh, I already caught the collecting bug, but I stick to US Cents. Grandfathers 2nd wife's first hubby was a big collector, apparently she has hundreds of thousands of dollars in gold and silver coins in a bank vault. I can't for the life of me convince her to get them graded though.
jktseug wrote:As a long term storage for monetary value it works well (unless someone is ever able to turn lead into gold).
divegeek wrote:jktseug wrote:As a long term storage for monetary value it works well (unless someone is ever able to turn lead into gold).
We actually can turn other metals into stable, non-radioactive gold. It's easier to turn mercury into gold than lead, but both can be done. At present, the cost of doing it is more than the value of the gold produced, by a large factor -- about 10x. Improvements in the process could change that, though.
jktseug wrote:divegeek wrote:jktseug wrote:As a long term storage for monetary value it works well (unless someone is ever able to turn lead into gold).
We actually can turn other metals into stable, non-radioactive gold. It's easier to turn mercury into gold than lead, but both can be done. At present, the cost of doing it is more than the value of the gold produced, by a large factor -- about 10x. Improvements in the process could change that, though.
I actually think I remember reading something like that, but really I was thinking mass scale and value. We can turn water into hydrogen, and hydrogen is a great fuel, but that doesn't make it cost effective. Apparently it takes more energy to make the hydrogen than you will get using the hydrogen.
Daeyel wrote:Dad has already tried. She is adamantly opposed to doing anything with the coins. Its too bad,because they are going to end up selling them for hospice care, and lose significant money. Whoever buys those coins will get a good deal, he was an extremely discriminate collector, and these coins have not been on the market since the 1950's and 60's. There may be some real eye openers in there.
jktseug wrote:divegeek wrote:jktseug wrote:As a long term storage for monetary value it works well (unless someone is ever able to turn lead into gold).
We actually can turn other metals into stable, non-radioactive gold. It's easier to turn mercury into gold than lead, but both can be done. At present, the cost of doing it is more than the value of the gold produced, by a large factor -- about 10x. Improvements in the process could change that, though.
I actually think I remember reading something like that, but really I was thinking mass scale and value. We can turn water into hydrogen, and hydrogen is a great fuel, but that doesn't make it cost effective. Apparently it takes more energy to make the hydrogen than you will get using the hydrogen.
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