Heute habe ich mir mein riesiges Vermögen angeschaut und dabei ist mir aufgefallen, dass eine der Münzen so abgefeilt war, dass es sich scheinbar um Münzraspeln handelte. Dabei handelt es sich um eine Praxis, bei der Menschen Metall von Münzen entfernen, um im Grunde Geld zu stehlen.

https://i.redd.it/nzv51ui3izmg1.png

Von PantiiLion

22 Kommentare

  1. One-Conference-3952 on

    The metal would basically worthless though as they are not made from a precious metal. More likely it just got mangled somehow.

  2. indischerozean on

    And how exactly would that work and be profitable in any sense? Coins are made of worthless material.

  3. MILK_FEELS_PAIN on

    I think a liklier explanation is that it got run over and dragged a bit

  4. derFensterputzer on

    To me this rather looks like dragged across asphalt than filed down

  5. Acceptable-Damage274 on

    Sometimes when people try to pay with coins at a machine (like Selecta or parking) and the machine refuses the coins, they scrape them across the surface and try again. I think that is what happened to the coin.

  6. The metal used in coins nowadays is cheap. This one looks more like it was scraped across a hard surface by accident.

  7. Unlucky-Mongoose-377 on

    Totally unacceptable. Go to the BNS, ask for a refund, give them all the details about the case, they need to know what is happening !

  8. That was only a thing when the coin’s value was related to the material it was made out of. This is also why there are those small ribs on the edges, so you can see whether the coin is whole or not.

    This coin is a copper-nickel alloy (no more silver after 1968). Even if it was made 100% out of copper it would still only be worth less that 10 cents.

  9. Been a while.
    But for ticket machines and the likes, I used to have to rub the coins against surfaces when the machine kept rejecting my coins — so it would finally accept it after rubbing it on metal for a few seconds.
    I imagine that would make a coin look like that.

  10. MajorNo6860 on

    The coin is from 1995, so 30-31 years old. If I look at how people treat their own things I am not surprised it looks like that by now.

  11. Yes, i am a coin shaver.
    My father taught me the art of coin shaving. It is a family business.

  12. Book_Dragon_24 on

    That coin is over 30 years old. It‘s been dinged around for three decades, out in coin slots, rubbed against other coins in purses, probably dropped on the street at least once, with people stepping on it or cycling over it….. that‘s just signs of age in a coin.

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