Pointing out the relationship between AGD and DYM.
AGD is ~$1.00 face value of the U.S. silver coins. The exact definition is as follows:
"I.2 Silver Dollar (AGD)
Silver Dollar (AGD) is a unit of weight of the Coins. AGD 1 = 24.71 grams of dollar - denominated one dime, quarter dollar, half dollar and
one dollar coins minted by U.S. Mint in 90% silver in 1964 or earlier. Common trade names for AGD include "90% circulated U.S.
silver" and "junk silver". It should be noted that some U.S. One Dollar coins, such as Peace Dollar, are lawful instances of AGD based
on weight, and contain on average AGD 1.08 of silver. Anything minted in 1965 or later is never a lawful instance of AGD.
The physical measurement of the amount of AGD may not deviate from the correct weight more than 0.25% or AGD 0.05, whichever is greater.
From Customer's perspective, weighing or counting of Coins is applied only upon Pick-up.
In SIS Information System, AGD balances are recorded to AGD 0.01 precision. When executing trades, the rounding to the nearest AGD
0.01 will be to the benefit of Merchant."
It is possible for most people, to buy AGD with bank wire/SEPA from
Silvervault.
Why is this interesting for bitcoin holders?
- Silvervault also trades in bitcoin. Currently the system is not integrated to bitcoin protocol, so that there is no possibility to fund account or take withdrawals in bitcoin (only Euro). But soon will. Then there will be seamless possibility for almost anyone (most notable exception: U.S. citizens or residents) to buy AGD (=10 DYM) for bitcoin for 0.25-1.00% fee.
Why is this interesting for DYM holders?
- AGD and DYM are linear representations of one another. (I would urge OP to fix DYM as exactly 2.471 grams, to achieve easiest conversion.)
- We consider to offer AGD codes, which would monetize most of our silver stock of 140,000 AGD for global trading.