+intolerable Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 I thought I'd read that to have one's coin trackable at geocaching.com, there needed to be a minimum of 250. But recently I thought that I had seen some trackable coins limited to 100 copies. Is this simply a matter of wishful thinking/vivid imagination on my part, a tricky workaround, or am I incorrect about the 250 number? My wife has a coin planned, although its not really intended to be a geocoin. I was hoping to make a very limited number of the design trackable as a gift (that probably would be best read as 'as a way to suck her into the wonderful world of geocoins') but my personal budget defines 'a limited number' much closer to 100 rather than 250+. Any information would be greatly appreciated! Thanks Chris/intolerable Quote Link to comment
+The Moop Along Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 Quote from pinned thread up top-- Order Details: 1. Generally, Personal Geocoin codes will begin with “PC” prefix and will be named “Personal Geocoin” 2. If 100 codes or more are ordered, a custom name may be requested. 3. If 250 codes or more are ordered, a custom icon may be ordered (details below). 3. If 250 codes or more are ordered for a geocaching event, a custom name may be requested, a custom icon may be ordered and the “EV” prefix may be requested. 4. If 1,000 codes or more are ordered, a custom name may be requested, a custom icon may be ordered and a custom prefix may be requested. 5. A custom activation code may be requested for any series of 100 coins or more. The activation code must be the same for all coins in the series. End Quote Quote Link to comment
+intolerable Posted October 25, 2007 Author Share Posted October 25, 2007 Quote from pinned thread up top-- Thanks... and I'll attempt to look a bit harder for the information needed in the future. Quote Link to comment
+WWC-World's Worst Cacher Posted October 25, 2007 Share Posted October 25, 2007 Just to add to . . . You can do less than 100 coins and your coin vendor can help you with that. Once you start going below 100 though you run into some cost considerations, such as a fixed die cost. Quote Link to comment
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