It looks like an ordinary change machine at a car wash. But could it actually contain a small jackpot? One man thinks so. He says that $5 in quarters could be worth a whole lot more. The clip from creator Life With Marz (@life.with.marz8) offers a life hack that taps into the curiosity and "what if?" that makes the change machine feel like a slot machine. If just the right mix of silver-heavy quarters comes out, he claims, you could profit handily. "When silver is up and you're at a gas station, go ahead and put five dollars in, get some quarters, maybe get lucky, maybe get some junk silver that's worth more than five dollars," he explains in the clip that’s been viewed more than 14,000 times. Silver Jump Drives Searchers There's some actual logic to this hack, even if it still seems like kind of a reach. Quarters minted before 1965 aren't clad copper-nickel like the ones sitting in your cup holder. The 25-cent coins from that era were 90% silver, each containing almost 0.2 troy ounces of the precious metal. At current prices, that works out to $16 or $17 per coin in silver based purely on melt value. The backdrop for that math is the surge in precious metals prices. Over the past year, silver prices have tripled to north of $90 an ounce, with gains continuing. That increase has led to heavy activity in silver-heavy exchange-traded funds, even as some dealers report more selling than buying of pre-1965 bullion coins. The rub is that there's a big difference between "worth" and accessible cash value. Even when the melt value is high, junk silver drawn from loose, circulated coins doesn't always command top prices from dealers or refiners, especially when supplies are plentiful and refinery demand is light. In the current rally, bags of pre-1965 coins have at times traded at a discount, a market quirk that complicates the easy-riches angle hyped in the video. So, sure, there is a chance that a 1964 quarter can literally contain more than 60 cents of raw silver. But turning that into spendable cash might prove to be next to impossible. Finding Hidden Treasures In Coins The unlikelihood of making a quick buck on some change hasn't stopped people from trying, however. Skeptics were quick to dismiss the advice. "Trust me, them car wash folks look through their quarters," one reasoned. Another added, "Maybe 45 years ago." But coin roll hunting has been a hobby for years, built on the idea that not everything valuable gets found. People order boxes of quarters from banks, feed bills into vending machines, and even make routine stops at laundromats looking for overlooked silver or special mint marks. Every so often, someone posts proof in the form of a worn 1963 Washington pulled from circulation, or a rare "W" mint quarter found in change. The car wash version is simply the low-effort edition of the same habit. Five dollars isn't enough to feel reckless, and just enough to feel like taking a real shot. Besides, it’s not like you’re losing any money. That middle ground may be the real driving force behind the hack, since it reframes a routine errand into a small, controlled gamble. Instead of watching soap rinse off the hood, you're flipping coins in your palm and scanning the dates. Most of them will be worth face value. But there's a flicker of possibility that one may be worth far more. In reality, the odds are long, and the margins are thinner than the excited narrator suggests. Still, the machine hums, the quarters drop, and for a moment, it feels like hidden value might still be circulating in plain sight. And at worst, you walk away with exactly $5 and the after effects of a cheap "maybe today’s the day…" dopamine buzz. Motor1 reached out to the creator via direct message and commenting on the clip. We’ll update this if he responds. We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Motor1.com? Take our 3 minute survey. - The Motor1.com Team