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999 Silver Gold
Silver Bullion Coins - Generic .999 Silver Round verses the .999 American Silver Eagle Round
How to Care for 925 Silver Jewelry?
Generally silver jewelry in the markets are the 925 silver jewelry, but not 999 silver, because 925 silver jewelry is a kind of gold silver which combined other metals. This kind of 925 silver has also been recognized as sterling silver in the international area. This silver contains 7.5 percent copper and 92.5 percent pure silver so that it could make strong and durable jewelry which also difficult to out of shape and deformed compare with the 999 pure silver that is very soft.
Of cause, this kind of jewelry has already become very popular and necessary decoration among us. However, do you plan to protect your beloved 925 silver jewelry and let them keep shining on you when the elegant 925 silver jewelry bring you good feeling. If not, it is time for you to care for them now! But, how to maintain them is the key point that we should mention.
Maybe the biggest reason to cause the silver oxidation is the oxygen in the air, so to barrier the air is the best way of maintenance, such as when you don't wear your silver jewelry, put them into a sealed plastic bag and then place in the jewelry box to prevent the directly contact with air.
Besides, clean your silver jewelry regularly. The jewelry may still oxide because of some reasons, so at this time you can make them shining again with the silver washing water or silver polish cloth. But one thing should pay more attention is that the silver washing water has so strong damaging effect that try best to use only soft cloth to do the cleaning and maintenance unless it's absolutely necessary. (If you decide to clean the jewelry with silver wash water, you should clean out the chemicals in the surface with gentle rub after you have already made the jewelry shining, then remember to dry them a hair dryer or the oxygen in the water will speed up the silver oxide.
In addition, don't put numerous jewelry in one jewelry box or drawer, because the different hardness of these precious stones and metals will be damage after friction.
What's more, don't wear the 925 silver jewelry and other precious metals at the same time. This will avoid damaging that cause by collision.
Furthermore, you should try best to avoid 925 silver jewelry contacting water or chemical products directly, especially swim in the sea when you wear them.
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Frequently Asked Questions...
How much would a 8 oz. .999 fine silver sell for? And where can you sell it?
this is a 8 oz .999 fine silver proof baseball card of Honus Wagner. how much would it sell just for the silver and where could i sell it? would gold buyers buy, or r they strictly gold buyers?
Answer:
These commemorative items are from the 1990s, when the economy was strong. Silver was relatively cheap - the average daily price in January 1995 was $4.75 - so the actual silver value of the piece ($38) was substantially below the value as a collectible. This particular item would have been marketed for a minimum of $99.95, and the economy, as well as the sports collectibles market in general, was more than strong enough to support that pricing.
Today, the market has fallen way off for sports collectibles in general (though rare items and vintage pre-WWII sports cards have continued to appreciate) and the value of the silver has far outstripped the value of the collectible. There is no added collector value for this piece. Due to the volatility of the precious metals market (silver has risen 100% from where it was one year ago, and while no one expects it to be back down there any time soon, it can drop dollars per ounce in a matter of days). Therefore, anyone looking to buy this that is not going to hold it will be looking to flip it fast to avoid being burned by one of those sharp drops. So they'll be looking to buy at 85%-90% of the current value. $30-$31 per ounce. Maybe $250. A local coin dealer that advertises to 'pay top dollar for your gold and silver' is the best bet for this. It's fast and easy.
But there are a few who do think that silver is going still higher and are buying anything they can get their hands on. .999 silver is the best you can buy, as 90% junk silver and sterling .925 both require refining to turn into pure silver, and the scrap buyers will discount. So a bullion buyer knows this and will pay more than any dealer, maybe even a small premium over 'melt'.
The best place to find these bullion buyers is eBay. But that comes at a cost. By the time you get done with fees, (about 12%) it might be easier to just sell it to the dealer.
Let's say the dealer would pay $250. You could get $36 per ounce on eBay, about $1.50 per ounce premium over market as of now, as long as shipping was fairly cheap, under $10.. The more shipping is, the less someone will pay for the per-ounce price. So that's $288. After fees, you'd see about $254. Now, if you had 20 or more ounces, eBay is definitely the place to sell, because at about $550, the selling commission tops out at a flat $50. A $1000 sale is going to cost you about 8% and a $2000 sale, 5.5%.
For just 8 ounces, the local dealer is probably your best bet.




















































































