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How Change is Made… At the U.S. Mint

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The usefulness of change — that of pennies, in particular – has been debated for years. Pennies and nickels cost more to produce than their face value — but the U.S. Mint keeps hammering them out nonetheless, along with dimes and quarters, totalling billions of coins each year at a cost of millions of dollars.

On July 25, a new 25-cent piece will enter in circulation: the 2010 Yosemite National Park quarter. This is the third quarter in the “America the Beautiful” series, which honors 56 national parks and other national sites in each state, the District of Columbia and U.S. territories (Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, United States Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands). The U.S. Mint will release five new quarters each year, through 2021.

Why are we telling you all this? Aside from the fact that we like the sound of clinging quarters as we put them in the vending machine, we also recently came across two fascinating videos from WalletPop.com that offer an exclusive behind-the-scenes peek at how coins are produced at the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia. (The U.S. Mint is, of course, not to be confused with Mint.com, the personal finance management website that publishes this blog.)

Above, you can watch five-ton coils of copper and nickel being put into blanket presses that, as one U.S. Mint employee says on camera, are “like giant cookie cutters.” Little disks known as “blanks” are then punched out and, finally, getting stamped to become the coins that you’re used to throwing in the vending machine.

Even more interesting is how coins are actually designed: a process you can learn more about in the video below.  Believe it or not, coin designers actually use the same sculpting software used by the big Hollywood studios. In fact, WalletPop found, that came to a few years ago, after one U.S. Mint employee saw a Shrek DVD with his grandchildren.  To find out more, watch the video below, or at WalletPop.com.

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8 Comments so far

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  1. I’d love to also read “Why Change is Made”. Pennies and nickels are practically worthless and dimes are rapidly heading that way too. I wonder how much money the government would save if we stopped making pennies and nickels? The money spent on the metal itself, the dies, the employees, etc etc.

  2. brando

    It is a good thing for a coin to be worth more then when you buy it. Pennies just need to be thought of with less unquestioning currency acceptance.

  3. Medisoft

    I actually just installed the Mint app on my Android phone, works great!

  4. “Pennies and nickels cost more to produce than their face value….”
    Yes, but a penny is also worth more than it’s face value. What is the average life of a circulated coin, and how many transactions is it used in?

    So, should we stop making pennies and nickels? Should we stop buying houses? If your interest rate on a thirty-year mortgage is more than 5.3%, you end up paying more than double what your house is “worth”.

  5. If that means merchants get to make a few more cents per transaction off of me and everyone else by rounding up to the next multiple of 5¢… then no. e.g. $2.76 becoming $2.80. They just made an extra 4 cents off of me..

  6. CreditShout

    I didn’t even realize the U.S. mint was releasing new quarters! I can’t wait to see them. I’ll have to go through my change jar to see if I have any new ones that I haven’t noticed.

  7. This is neat – thanks for the inside look!

  8. I’d be interested in finding out “Why Change is Made” as well Matt. Good question.