Also if you can trade in hard currency it is nigh impossible to trace.
Example, n Star wars people essentially use a credstick. But hard curency exists as well. Same reason, criminal much prefer the use of hard currency

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Only he's talking Dead Reign here.jaymz wrote:Yeah I'd say they would be. Precious metals are not exactley plentiful in Rifts.
Also if you can trade in hard currency it is nigh impossible to trace.
Example, n Star wars people essentially use a credstick. But hard curency exists as well. Same reason, criminal much prefer the use of hard currency
Misfit KotLD wrote:Only he's talking Dead Reign here.jaymz wrote:Yeah I'd say they would be. Precious metals are not exactley plentiful in Rifts.
Also if you can trade in hard currency it is nigh impossible to trace.
Example, n Star wars people essentially use a credstick. But hard curency exists as well. Same reason, criminal much prefer the use of hard currency
Citizen Lazlo wrote:Teltum wrote:I disagree that money is worthless in the new world. A pool table takes quarters and the balls can be thrown or used as a mobility denial system. A super bounce ball can make a handy distraction. A pop vending machine that still has power is a source of food.
I'd rather carry a crowbar to open them up.
Teltum wrote:...A pop vending machine that still has power is a source of food....
J. Lionheart wrote:Lead itself, however, might become a real commodity metal, due to it's exceedingly practical use in bullets. Bullets have been legal tender in this country before, and it would make sense to have them as such again.
Leon Kennedy wrote:J. Lionheart wrote:There hasn't been a U.S. Cent with significant copper content since 1982. The current ones are 97.5% zinc, with only 2.5% copper added, as a plating. At 2.5 grams weight, that's not much copper. Not that zinc is valueless, but it isn't the same by any means. A U.S. Nickel, on the other hand, is 75% copper, and 25% nickel, and weighs 5 grams. A Dime or a a quarter is even better, however, both have 91.67% copper. The dime is 2.268 grams, and the quarter is 5.67 grams. The quarter will give your the highest density of copper by volume, in terms of individual coins (advantage over the dime only manifests at the ten-thousandths place of the decimal, most likely because of the difference in the reeding), though dimes will be better for mass carriage, due to the spacing between coin stacks being smaller.
None of these things, however, are likely to maintain any value as currency. They'd pretty much be a tradegoods only, or more likely, smelted and tossed around as ingots. Gold is even more pointless in an apocalypse; it has no practical purpose for anything most people will be doing, and is obscenely heavy (nearly twice as heavy as lead). Not that some people won't want it anyway, but those are the same people who'll die because they care more about old standards than new reality. Maybe some comfortably established individuals or locations with no survival concerns and a secure immobile storage will want it and be able to make use of it in reestablishing normalcy down the line, but most folks have far more important things to worry about than showing off. You're probably better off with can of soup than a gold coin.
Lead itself, however, might become a real commodity metal, due to it's exceedingly practical use in bullets. Bullets have been legal tender in this country before, and it would make sense to have them as such again. We're very devoted, these days, to the idea of a currency - something that has value beyond the practical. That's hard to do and rare, however, and I don't think it would be coins for quite a while (bills wouldn't return for a very long time). It took about 100 years to really get coins going in North America the first time, and the wide acceptability of bills took another 100 years more. Our current system of coins and bills is actually only around 80 years old - it's hard to get people to trust fiat currency.
I whole heartedly agree with your statement about bullets being valuable, but you have to appreciate that a bullet can be made from just about any known substance. Wax, rubber, wood, lead, gold, silver, tin, copper - you get the point. Bullets can be made from just about any substance and used. How durable that bullet is - well, that's a different story.
Ubiquity wrote:Thinyser wrote:Leon Kennedy wrote:J. Lionheart wrote:There hasn't been a U.S. Cent with significant copper content since 1982. The current ones are 97.5% zinc, with only 2.5% copper added, as a plating. At 2.5 grams weight, that's not much copper. Not that zinc is valueless, but it isn't the same by any means. A U.S. Nickel, on the other hand, is 75% copper, and 25% nickel, and weighs 5 grams. A Dime or a a quarter is even better, however, both have 91.67% copper. The dime is 2.268 grams, and the quarter is 5.67 grams. The quarter will give your the highest density of copper by volume, in terms of individual coins (advantage over the dime only manifests at the ten-thousandths place of the decimal, most likely because of the difference in the reeding), though dimes will be better for mass carriage, due to the spacing between coin stacks being smaller.
None of these things, however, are likely to maintain any value as currency. They'd pretty much be a tradegoods only, or more likely, smelted and tossed around as ingots. Gold is even more pointless in an apocalypse; it has no practical purpose for anything most people will be doing, and is obscenely heavy (nearly twice as heavy as lead). Not that some people won't want it anyway, but those are the same people who'll die because they care more about old standards than new reality. Maybe some comfortably established individuals or locations with no survival concerns and a secure immobile storage will want it and be able to make use of it in reestablishing normalcy down the line, but most folks have far more important things to worry about than showing off. You're probably better off with can of soup than a gold coin.
Lead itself, however, might become a real commodity metal, due to it's exceedingly practical use in bullets. Bullets have been legal tender in this country before, and it would make sense to have them as such again. We're very devoted, these days, to the idea of a currency - something that has value beyond the practical. That's hard to do and rare, however, and I don't think it would be coins for quite a while (bills wouldn't return for a very long time). It took about 100 years to really get coins going in North America the first time, and the wide acceptability of bills took another 100 years more. Our current system of coins and bills is actually only around 80 years old - it's hard to get people to trust fiat currency.
I whole heartedly agree with your statement about bullets being valuable, but you have to appreciate that a bullet can be made from just about any known substance. Wax, rubber, wood, lead, gold, silver, tin, copper - you get the point. Bullets can be made from just about any substance and used. How durable that bullet is - well, that's a different story.
I was just thinking that though lead might not be all that available in the average home there would be lots of gold rings and other gold jewelry in homes that would be great for melting and use as bullets. Being even heavier than lead (lots heavier) gold bullets would have no problem carrying their momentum and would likely make good rifle rounds.
IMHO...
Gold is more malleable (I believe) and ductile(I know) than lead, so depending on the gold content of the round, it could be worthless as a bullet. And who has the time to melt gold down and mix it with other metals to create a viable enough round?
Though perhaps using gold as the core or a sheathing over a bullet? But even then, why waste the effort? just use silver... or lead. And speaking of coinage...
Living in Denver, the coins here at the US Mint would be worthless, but the Mint itself would make one hell of a fortress base of operations. Am working on a campaign based around the Mint...
Carl Gleba wrote:My original line of thinking goes along with asajosh...
Carl
Jesterzzn wrote:So just remember that its just the internet, and none of our opinions matter anyway, and you'll do fine.
Currency would have the same inherint value in Dead Reign that it has to day. Its valuable as long as you believe it has value.
Gamer wrote:Currency would have the same inherint value in Dead Reign that it has to day. Its valuable as long as you believe it has value.
You might have placed value on it, I will not.
Carl Gleba wrote:My original line of thinking goes along with asajosh...
Carl
Jesterzzn wrote:So just remember that its just the internet, and none of our opinions matter anyway, and you'll do fine.
Shawn Merrow wrote:The weights they use to align car tires are also lead.
Leon Kennedy wrote:Seeing as we're talking about melting things down and making them into bullets, I feel I have to put in the following:
1. If we're going to rummage through houses to find metals to melt down and turn into bullets, the first place anybody should stop is the kitchen. Why? Silverware. Stainless steel. Granted, the melting point is 2,781 degrees Fahrenheit (whereas gold is only 1,947, silver is 1,763, and lead is 621), but every home in the country - heck, every home in the WORLD - has silverware in the kitchen drawers.
2. As someone pointed out already, who has the time to melt metal? The temperature and equipment required to do so aren't just sitting around in someone's basement (although jewelers either do it themselves or hire an outside company to do metal work for them). You could, maybe, use a high school science lab or metal shop. But are the beneifts of clearing out a high school worth it for the primary reason of smelting to make bullets?
azazel1024 wrote:Rolling a coin far enough that the zombie didn't see you start to roll it is pretty chancy. Better just to toss it to make some noise, in which case a rock is just as good.
The likelihood of finding a soda or vending machine with power would be vanishingly small, probably up there on the likelihood of finding an honest politician.
On another note, stainless steel would erode the rifling on a barrel pretty fast. It could do in a pinch though. Better to form in to shot for a shotgun or solid slug for a shotgun, no rifling to worry about there and much easier to make shotgun cartridges (you could easily reuse the base and making a shot cup isn't to hard to do either, plus if you had to you could make/load it with black powder if you could also get percussion caps of the right size).
-Matt
Teltum wrote:The one weakness of a crowbar... it is loud
azazel1024 wrote:Steel shot wouldn't have horrible range. Shot range is more limited by the choke of the shotgun, IE the spread pattern then anything kind of like old flintlock muskets were limited by their accuracy. If you can't hit the target reliably at say 100 yards there isn't much point in shooting at it. If you have a 10yd spread pattern at 100yds then there isn't much point in shooting at it as you aren't likely to hit it with anything or not enough to really hurt it.
O, OO or OOO steel buckshot would do a decent job and over 30-80yds it isn't going to lose an appreciable amount more energy then lead would. It would also do a lot more damage at shorter ranges (probably anything under 50yds) then lead would as when it impacts it would transfer its energy much faster due to the low weight. It would also have better penetration as it would tend not to deform on impact with a harder surface. This is all for fairly short ranges, but I wouldn't tend to shot at things at longer ranges with a shotgun unless hunting. Zombie, well they move slow enough that you can save your shells till they get fairly close.
-Matt
azazel1024 wrote:Shawn Merrow wrote:The weights they use to align car tires are also lead.
I keep forgetting about that. Yeah, so that means any tire shop is going to have a ready supply, many mechanic's shops, some car dealers and basically any car will have some amount. Considering the size and weight any given car might have enough for 2-10 bullets and any of the shops, etc are likely to have enough for hundreds to thousands of bullets worth of lead.
-Matt
Citizen Lazlo wrote:Aku-Arkaine wrote:Two of the highest value commodities you will find after the fall will be Black Powder and Alcohol, just as the bard (Leslie Fish) said
Of course you can make both with a few tools and ingredients.
Ubiquity wrote:bradshaw wrote:It seems that cash would be very easy to come across in DR and lose it value (in some cases I'd think that it would be just laying in the streets.) Gold is mankinds one contant, Hores of Zombies running around is terrifiying but so were screaming hordes of vikings Slaying, raping and tortching everything. Folks fought for Survival then and it didn't make gold obsolete. precious metals have been used since the beginning of time to get other to part with goods and services. Carrying 18 cans of green beans and seven boxes of ammo for trade would become impractical. A samwich bag full of looted gold rings on the other hand may prove quite useful. Seeds for growing crops may also become extremely valuable in some circles.
Sorry Mr. Bradshaw, but I have to agree with the others in this matter (though I wholeheartedly agree about the seeds). I don't care if you have a bar of platinum, it does me NO good whatsoever in the zombie apocalypse. Most people, including me, would be hard pressed to raise crops well, assuming you could find a place of safety to do so, much less repair and clean guns, make ammo, create an ozone water purifier and a multitude of other things. Ammo, food, alcohol, drugs (legal and illegal), certain spices, a LifeStraw... these matter. Precious metal? Not so much.
"Hi, got a bar of gold here... trade for that case of canned green beans? No? How about 6 .38 bullets? Yes? Thanks!" :BANG: "Wow... now i have 5 bullets, a case of green beans and a bar of gold!"
hand_of_vecna wrote:Having a working knowledge of physics and mettalurgy but limited knowledge of fire arms I was wondering would gold bullets be superior for all the reasons that aluminum/steel ones are inferior?
and no stripping wires and other parts from existing structures and electronics or from an electrician's van or a store would be much easier than making them from scratch.
Luckluster wrote:Another note...
I firmly believe that humans do not change. Even in the circumstances of a DR environment, humans will still want shiny/ and or beautiful things. Women will still wear makeup and jewelry (Especially in a safe haven environment). Human nature does not change, so precious metals will still have value everywhere there are humans to put value on them.
azazel1024 wrote:For bullet casings I don't know that you can really use a mold. Aren't modern bullet casings using extruded brass (most of them at least that are brass) for strength?
Severus Snape wrote:azazel1024 wrote:For bullet casings I don't know that you can really use a mold. Aren't modern bullet casings using extruded brass (most of them at least that are brass) for strength?
Could you, potentially, re-use the shells/casings from spent bullets? Technically, wouldn't you just have to fill a spent shell with some gunpowder and a new projectile? I'm asking cuz I don't honestly know if it's possible. And if it is, then this becomes a way to save on melting down metal unnecessarily to create casings. Then again, you'd have to spend time collecting all of the spent casings, but still.