Sterling Silver, often available at estate sales at below the spot price of silver, is a good way to make your investment dollars go further when buying precious metals to protect yourself from hyperinflation and currency collapse.
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@thenewsurvivalist Thanks! Will do! And keep up the good videos!
@Marsupium All commodities will go up in price. You can save your aluminum cans if you want. I don’t recommend investing in copper, however, because between now and then copper will not increase in value percentage-wise nearly as much as precious metals will. And BY NO MEANS should you invest in copper pennies, because it is illegal to melt them or ship them outside the US so they are just like holding fiat paper dollars. Buy silver! Forget the rest!
@thenewsurvivalist Thanks! But what about copper? Wouldnt that be valuble? I mean, when the system breaks down but there would still be people trading stuff with eatchother and if I were to buy a loaf of bread for example with a silver bullion, wouldnt that be a little over priced?
Many thanks!
@Marsupium Stay away from gemstones unless you are an expert. The same can be said about numismatic coins. Stay away! The only things to consider besides gold and silver are platinum and palladium. But there is plenty of gold and silver around so I’d stick with those two mostly.
Hi! I was wondering what valuble metals besides gold and silver might be worth buying? Copper perhaps? And what about gemstones such as amethysts, rubies and diamonds?
Many thanks!
@thenewsurvivalist Thanks!
@fieryphoenixe My boot! But first I put it together neatly as best I can so that it will all stay together, bending down the edges with needle-nose pliers, etc. if necessary.
Hi, what do you use to compress them down so neatly and compact? Thanks!
@thenewsurvivalist At 3:19, you first mention that the un-weighted dessert dish is 2 ounces ‘pure sterling,’ then when you put it down, you say “about 2 ounces pure silver” (by accident). That is where the confusion likely came from.
Very well put together video and very informative
sterling is my last name Doc wana adopt me :]
Where can you buy silver and gold at Wholesale prices ???
you remind me of the guy from rounders. nice video
@chightower26 I said pure sterling, not pure silver. Pure sterling is .925. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand this.
.925 or pure, now I’m confused.
@72542 I use my foot. But first I try to put it together in such a way that it will stay in one piece after it is crushed. Sometimes this involves putting small pieces inside larger ones, bending down the edges with pliers, etc. whatever it takes.
Just curious as to what method you used to compressed the compote so nicely. I’ve got several items that I have removed the weights from and had been considering compressing them to reduce the stored volume. BTW, I do enjoy your videos.
great video
@thenewsurvivalist Thanks Doc! Keep up making videos!
@Marsupium Don’t buy ANYTHING that is plated gold nor silver. Know what you are buying. It must be marked. Gold filled (GF) is also bad-even worse than plated. Gold & silver jewelry is good, but because of the workmanship involved they usually sell for much higher than their melt value. For that reason I’d avoid them. The best thing to buy is 90% US circulated silver coins that you can purchase at close to melt value. No matter now little money you have you should be accumulating a little ea mo.
Hi! I am wondering if there is any idea to buy silver and gold jewelry, such as rings, along with bars and rounds, plated or solid? I am only 17 at the moment and dont have a regular income, nevertheless I have a future I need to secure just like any other working citizen.
Many thanks
Erhard
Thank you for posting this vid!!
That creamer is worth $300+ now!! Silver is skyrocketing!!
@thenewsurvivalist they are marked sterling just really wore i hate coin abd bullion dealers a auction or antique mall is much cheaper
@brian93ist If you buy silver items that are not marked “sterling” (or its equivalent) you are going to be very disappointed. You might as well burn your money. Sure the “sterling” can wear off. I have seen it. But I have purchased thousands of ster items and have seen it worn off very rarely. The surest way to tell is an acid test (if you know how to do it.) I suggest you buy your silver from a coin and bullion dealer and stick with rounds and bars or old US circulated 90% and 40% silver coins.
@thenewsurvivalist i disagree some of the ones stamped sterling have wore off for the most part though