Weight Tolerances from Mints & Producers of Silver products

Howdy all - I have been busy filming a (what I think to be) really interesting topic for my video tomorrow.

free silver coins_LI.jpg

As a prelude to the video I wanted to share my findings on this interesting subject.

Weight Tolerances from Mints & Producers of Silver products
It is well known that mints and makers of silver products (like myself!) have certain levels of tolerance when producing coins. The bigger the outfit the tighter the tolerance. The Royal mint is who I have focused on in my video but I would imagine to some degree it is the same for all mints and makers.

First I will use my own 1 oz Silver Forum bars as an example. They are all at least 1 oz. Not a single bar weighs less than 31.1 grams of silver. Some weigh considerably more (up to about 33.5 grams!). And the reason for this is that it would take me a lot longer in time and energy as well as cost more in lost graphite crucibles to create all the bars at exactly 31.1 grams. So I have a tolerance and over all the average worked out to be 5%. That means that across 200 oz of forum bars I am giving away nearly 10 oz of silver!

Madness you might say! Well - the extra costs and time it would take to reduce this further outweighs the cost of the silver I am giving away. So I build it into the cost of doing business.

The same is true of the Mints of the world. The difference is that they have much better technology and skills to be able to create their coins and rounds to be as accurate as possible. But there is still a tolerance.

I took a sample of 25 Britannias from my melting fodder and weighed them all to find out how much free silver I had.

Now, I know that the calibration of my scales is going to be an issue for some of you more scientific types out there - but I have done my very best to accurately calibrate them. They are as good as they are going to be. Another facinating topic is how do we actually know what a kilogram weights - have a look at this facinating video if you have time.

But that is a topic for a whole other time.

Of the 25 britannias I weighed, on average I would say I had about 0.1 grams of silver extra per coin. Some were bang on 31.1 grams, but I had one which was 31.28!

So, here is the interesting theme of my video (which I will post a link to tomorrow) is - can you ever use that free silver or financially gain from having it there!!??!

A dealer is going to buy that off you as if it was 1 oz of silver. A forum member will pay for 1 oz of silver.

But...

If you bought 1000 Britannias and your average gain was 0.1g per coin...you end up with 100g of free silver!

Let's assume you can buy the britannias at exactly spot price. You melt them all down and end up with your 100g of free silver. Then you find someone to buy it at exactly the same spot price. You have 100g extra silver and you have made money!

Add an extra "0" to the number of britannias you buy and you end up with 1kg of free silver!

Now of course the argument is going to be it will cost you more than the volume of free silver to melt it down in time and resources but nevertheless it is an interesting premise!

Video to follow tomorrow but it would be great to hear your thoughts!

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Good topic and I like this idea. Now it's a shame I'll never have the funds to try this out but its worth looking in to.

10,000 britannia = 1kg of free silver (approx) so that's roughly £370 per £115,070 spent. @£0.37 per gram. That's a 0.32% profit margin. 😂😂

Better of buying a lottery ticket 💶💵💴💰💸💲

Makes your mouth water when you think the US mint made 47,000,000 US eagles in 2015. That is 470kg of silver they gave away!

💨👨🔫 "mind blown".....

Thank you for your continued support of SteemSilverGold

And the maples weigh extra due to milkspots! Every little bit helps.

Cannot beat free silver, great point but unless you melting it down it doesn't really make much difference and then in the UK, it would have to be hallmarked as well.

In a perfect world we don't need manufacturing tolerances, but it's not, so everything made requires a defined acceptable range. Nice to see you back BYB!