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Topic: CASASCIUS PHYSICAL BITCOIN - In Stock Now! (pic) - page 20. (Read 130365 times)

member
Activity: 60
Merit: 10
Now that Bitcoin value went ~10 times higher than it was half a year ago, is there a hope for new, lower denomination physical bitcoin designs? It would be nice to have 0.5, 0.1, 0.05, 0.01 denomination bitcoins too. Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1000
interested in some of the silvers depending on markup!

can money be sent to these coins once I know the number on front?

edit:

Let me add to that sorry,

If I purchased a nice coin or bar etc. which came with X amount preloaded to a wallet, If I wanted to use a coin/bar etc. for a savings account, could I send more money to the coin?
Obviously unable to pull any of it until I got the pin? I'm unsure how this shortened wallet number work's exactly, Or could I buy a coin with a wallet number and no money on it so I can use it as savings?

Maybe even worth making a "savings" or something similar Coin?
vip
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1140
The Casascius 1oz 10BTC Silver Round (w/ Gold B)
Sounds to me like the warning is: "warning, you COULD be paying more than the seller intends to be asking, simply due to stale information on his website", which I suppose is a fair warning.
hero member
Activity: 574
Merit: 500
Warning: HardBTC.org are still charging £225.00 (over $340) for 1BTC, and were even when it was down to nearly $50, on both their site and on ebay.

They were quick to up the prices each day they went up, but as the price crashed they conveniently forgot to lower it back.

This is how markets work though. It is not wrong and isn't in need of a warning if there are willing buyers to pay it.  This will just mean the faster there will be viable physical bitcoins from more competitive producers at a lower cost as it is clearly a ripe opportunity for whomever wants to get in to the business of making them.

At the time of $50, Ebay sold a few Casascius coins @ £150. I sold x4 elsewhere (fee free) @ £125 each, which i thought was fair price at that time. hardBTC is a registered business, so it would be fair to price in a premium for the good service David provides.

The point is the exchange rate. Even on hardBTC, 1BTC cost 1.8BTC (I don't have a problem with that), but the fiat price was still £225. At the bottom, 1BTC was about £35 and 1.8BTC was about £65.

For the 25BTC coin (cost 35BTC) about £3,000 of the £4,375 price was exchange rate cost.

It's not quite as crazy a difference now the bitcoin has recovered (it's only about 100% exchange fee), but you can still see it for yourself...
http://hardbtc.org/ocart/index.php?route=product/category&path=59
Click the currency button at the top to show prices in bitcoins and in pounds.

I'm not crying scam or anything, they have a right to do this if they want. Just a warning to any newcomers who may be reading, always check what the up-to-date exchange rate is whenever they buy anything, don't rely on what the seller's website shows.
legendary
Activity: 1554
Merit: 1000
Warning: HardBTC.org are still charging £225.00 (over $340) for 1BTC, and were even when it was down to nearly $50, on both their site and on ebay.

They were quick to up the prices each day they went up, but as the price crashed they conveniently forgot to lower it back.

This is how markets work though. It is not wrong and isn't in need of a warning if there are willing buyers to pay it.  This will just mean the faster there will be viable physical bitcoins from more competitive producers at a lower cost as it is clearly a ripe opportunity for whomever wants to get in to the business of making them.

At the time of $50, Ebay sold a few Casascius coins @ £150. I sold x4 elsewhere (fee free) @ £125 each, which i thought was fair price at that time. hardBTC is a registered business, so it would be fair to price in a premium for the good service David provides.

Mike. How many producers of the dollar bill/coins are there in the US, and have you any knowledge of the same question for other countries?
vip
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1140
The Casascius 1oz 10BTC Silver Round (w/ Gold B)
Warning: HardBTC.org are still charging £225.00 (over $340) for 1BTC, and were even when it was down to nearly $50, on both their site and on ebay.

They were quick to up the prices each day they went up, but as the price crashed they conveniently forgot to lower it back.

This is how markets work though. It is not wrong and isn't in need of a warning if there are willing buyers to pay it.  This will just mean the faster there will be viable physical bitcoins from more competitive producers at a lower cost as it is clearly a ripe opportunity for whomever wants to get in to the business of making them.
hero member
Activity: 574
Merit: 500
Warning: HardBTC.org are still charging £225.00 (over $340) for 1BTC, and were even when it was down to nearly $50, on both their site and on ebay.

They were quick to up the prices each day they went up, but as the price crashed they conveniently forgot to lower it back.
legendary
Activity: 1272
Merit: 1012
howdy
I'd also like to know resellers websites or links to add to the Resellers page on my site. So far it's just ebay and bitmit.

Not so hard to find https://www.casascius.com/ near the bottom of page.

Thanks! I was hoping that there were more US based resellers.

No offense to:
HardBTC.org (UK)
Bittiraha.fi (Finland)
microbitcoin.fr (France)
BitInnovate.com (Australia)
donator
Activity: 3108
Merit: 1166
Since you stopped accepting orders on your site, is there any place to order thats in the US?  Seems like all the places are overseas, and really don't want to mess with auction sites. 


I'd also like to know resellers websites or links to add to the Resellers page on my site. So far it's just ebay and bitmit.

Not so hard to find https://www.casascius.com/ near the bottom of page.
legendary
Activity: 1272
Merit: 1012
howdy
Since you stopped accepting orders on your site, is there any place to order thats in the US?  Seems like all the places are overseas, and really don't want to mess with auction sites. 


I'd also like to know resellers websites or links to add to the Resellers page on my site. So far it's just ebay and bitmit.
member
Activity: 116
Merit: 10
WINSTARS - We are changing the face of gambling
I'd very much like 1 BTC 1 oz silver coins. That would be a healthy diversification of wealth into metals/btc as of right now in my opinion ( roughly 1 fourth in metals)
I could see my self buy 10 or so of those Cheesy
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1005
this space intentionally left blank
repost


I suggest the following:

silver coins:
1/2oz = .5 BTC
1oz = 1 BTC
2oz = 2 BTC
5oz = 5 BTC
10oz = 10 BTC

silver bars (these could be coins as well!)
500g = 15 BTC
1000g = 30 BTC

gold:
1/20 oz = 0.5 BTC
1/10 oz = 1 BTC
1/4 oz = 2 BTC
1/2 oz = 5 BTC
1oz = 10 BTC

Have you thought about using not pure silver, but something akin to what was used for US coins back when they have been "real money"?



you mean something like an alloy of 6 X% silver and Y% others?
I'd probably help with the astronomical premiums for casascius these days.
However, a special edition with these... I'd hit it.
donator
Activity: 2772
Merit: 1019
repost


I suggest the following:

silver coins:
1/2oz = .5 BTC
1oz = 1 BTC
2oz = 2 BTC
5oz = 5 BTC
10oz = 10 BTC

silver bars (these could be coins as well!)
500g = 15 BTC
1000g = 30 BTC

gold:
1/20 oz = 0.5 BTC
1/10 oz = 1 BTC
1/4 oz = 2 BTC
1/2 oz = 5 BTC
1oz = 10 BTC

Have you thought about using not pure silver, but something akin to what was used for US coins back when they have been "real money"?
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1005
this space intentionally left blank
repost


I suggest the following:

silver coins:
1/2oz = .5 BTC
1oz = 1 BTC
2oz = 2 BTC
5oz = 5 BTC
10oz = 10 BTC

silver bars (these could be coins as well!)
500g = 15 BTC
1000g = 30 BTC

gold:
1/20 oz = 0.5 BTC
1/10 oz = 1 BTC
1/4 oz = 2 BTC
1/2 oz = 5 BTC
1oz = 10 BTC
legendary
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
I wanted some community input on this just for fun:

I'm at a point where I have a 1/2oz silver coin die done that says 5 BITCOINS.  But 5 BTC is now worth a hell of a lot more than it was when I started.

I almost want to start over and do 1oz=1BTC 1/2oz=1/2BTC and a smaller coin for 0.1 BTC... all in silver, and offer each (at least the biggest one or two) with the optional gold plated B like I did last time.

Do I run some coins with the 5 BITCOINS die, or just scrap it?  It will seem kind of weird having a 5 and a 0.5 BTC coin that are, well, alike in every way, including the year 2013, and I'm tempted to just scrap the die.

Sounds like a great idea.
hero member
Activity: 887
Merit: 1000
Hey Mike just ordered one of your coins.

I have 2 questions.

Do you publicly disclose how many coins are out there (or how many you plan on making) for each year? If so whats the numbers?

Also,

Since you stopped accepting orders on your site, is there any place to order thats in the US?  Seems like all the places are overseas, and really don't want to mess with auction sites. 

Thanks

Mike
sr. member
Activity: 560
Merit: 250
Hey Mike, I sent you a PM about my order.
legendary
Activity: 4466
Merit: 3391
I may be in the minority, but I prefer lower denomination base metal Casascius coins before PM Casascius coins. The PM coins seem too gimmicky to me.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1036
I wanted some community input on this just for fun:

I'm at a point where I have a 1/2oz silver coin die done that says 5 BITCOINS.  But 5 BTC is now worth a hell of a lot more than it was when I started.

I almost want to start over and do 1oz=1BTC 1/2oz=1/2BTC and a smaller coin for 0.1 BTC... all in silver, and offer each (at least the biggest one or two) with the optional gold plated B like I did last time.

Do I run some coins with the 5 BITCOINS die, or just scrap it?  It will seem kind of weird having a 5 and a 0.5 BTC coin that are, well, alike in every way, including the year 2013, and I'm tempted to just scrap the die.

A precious metal coin to me is strange when the face value is BTC, and pot metal could do just as good a job (instead of value = BTC + Silver + gold leaf - cost of separating Au & Ag + min(current premium, original premium). 1 oz = $27 of silver; If BTC drops 90% you could have coins worth more in metal than BTC. If you think silver is best to make them hard to counterfeit while easy to authenticate...

One Bitcoin is even a crazy coin now if the price doesn't pop, they've gone from USD $10 to $2 to $265 (now $234), it could be a new top-coin with the gold/silver design - for the same or lower BTC price premium as past 1BTC; a 1BTC looking as sharp as your avatar would be awesome just for the press picture.

Someone bought the $7000/1000BTC gold bar though, so there might still be a (fraudulent only?) market for a 5 BTC ~$1250 value.
legendary
Activity: 2576
Merit: 2267
1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
I wanted some community input on this just for fun:

I'm at a point where I have a 1/2oz silver coin die done that says 5 BITCOINS.  But 5 BTC is now worth a hell of a lot more than it was when I started.

I almost want to start over and do 1oz=1BTC 1/2oz=1/2BTC and a smaller coin for 0.1 BTC... all in silver, and offer each (at least the biggest one or two) with the optional gold plated B like I did last time.

Do I run some coins with the 5 BITCOINS die, or just scrap it?  It will seem kind of weird having a 5 and a 0.5 BTC coin that are, well, alike in every way, including the year 2013, and I'm tempted to just scrap the die.


Just sharpie in the decimal point.
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