I have 4 1921 Peace dollars. I was fooled by one until I got home and tested it with Metal detector. Can you tell which one is the fake? If so, how did you know? Educate us all. I actually got two fakes that day and they offered to replace them, I replaced the Morgan but decided to keep the Peace Dollar. It actually read in the low 80's on the detector, so it may have some silver, but it should have read +90. The Fake Morgan thumped in the nickel range. Which one is fake? Hopefully my pictures are enough for you to tell.
Top-right. The patina looks like that of many Chinese counterfeits, but, as you said, it is very difficult to tell. -Brian
The picture aren´t all that good,,,,But I would say its the top right coin myself......It looks like they used a worn 1921 peace dollar to cast the mold.....plus the coin doesn´t have any life to it,,,dull, flat and its dark all around the head and with out any color to it. I have seen Walking Liberty Half Dollars that was casted out of some kind of white metal that looked like this.
Okay, you're all right, top right is fake. The other 3 are real. I learned two things when I bought this coin. 1921's mixed in with a box of silver dollars doesn't happen for $20. And, look at them all closely. The guy I bought it from claimed he didn't know, but he knew enough about other coins to price them right. I paid nicely for the other 3. Thanks for the education, I see things now that I hadn't before.
Wow it's incredible what experience can do for you. I had also spotted the top right immediately. Thanks for the skills test!
Egad! The top right doesn't even look close to Lady Liberty. Her features are not sharp or crisp, even for her condition.
Now that I look alot more closely (though, the answer was given awfully quickly), heck yeah, compare Lady Liberty.....definitely looks different.
I had the top right one as my guess too. There's some oddities about the extra dark patina, as well as some irregularities in the features, esp. the eye. I "bought" a fake Seated Liberty dollar from China a couple years back, expected it to be fake, but it was not advertised as such. It just was too good a price though. So, I checked it carefully when I received it, oddly enough, they're trying harder now to fool coin collectors, this one the weight was right. But, the thickness of the coin was wrong. It wasn't silver in other words, and it was features wise and otherwise a good fake, except for that thickness (to compensate for the lighter weight metal they used, probably some sort of nickel alloy). I'll try to dig it out and post a picture of it to see if you all can tell from looking at it. I wouldn't have otherwise suspected it probably. If you had a whole stack of them, it would be obvious though, since they would be taller in a stack than ordinary dollars.
The bottom right because it has the most detail and they are good sculptures of american coins. Steve
What gave it away for me was the actual stamping. The date fades, and the picture doesn't pop. I could be mistaken, but most - if not all 1921's were "high relief" and really stood out - as does the one on the bottom right. It's a deep well produced coin. The spires on the crown also look jumbled together.