I have a GSA 1882 CC Morgan dollar in Carson City holder and original box from the 1970s It has crescent moon toned on the obverse and very slight toning on reverse. I want to know if I should send it to PCGS (who will remove it from the original holder) or send to another grader who will leave it in the original holder and grade it or leave it as is. Not sure of the grade my guess would be 60-64 thx
PCGS can leave the coin in its original holder - they actually recase it in one of their 5 oz slabs so the entire GSA holder is protected, not just labeled with the grade. You have your choice of this or removing it and slabbing in the standard holder.
NGC slabs with the ribbon, and now has the guarantee on grade that they have for all coins--since they have been certifying GSA coins for a while, I would go the NGC route.
Definitely. The GSA holders have their own following, and tend to sell for a bit more than other slabbed CC Morgans. Here is what a GSA certified grade by NGC looks like. This is my '85cc:
Not worth grading. If you're going to sell it, it would probably sell for more WITHOUT a grade than with one. I'd assume that would grade MS62 tops, due to all the chatter on the cheek there.
Disagree strongly. Can't tell grade from those pictures, as they aren't clear enough, and second--with that apparent toning, it is worth quite a bit more than the average GSA. Better pictures please!
I cleaned the images up a bit---here they are: No way a 62 from those pictures--at LEAST a 63 or better, with nice crescent toning on obverse. With my 40+ years of experience with Morgans, I'd say it is a nice coin!!
I'd say at least a 63 , Still a nice coin , I had 6 from the '70s think I paid $30 to the Gov. Wish I went for some better dates though .
In some cases, yes, as toning wasn't viewed the same way it is now. However, that is a desirable coin for sure, with the toning.
That coin would not have gotten into an "UNCIRCULATED" case at the Treasury Department with that toning. It's my guess that someone may have swapped it since it is not hard to do. Also, it is hard to tell what colors are in the toning from your photos. If it is very dark blue, almost black, closest to the rim, it is nearing the terminal state which would have a negative affect on the value. I don't think I'd spend the money to have it certified. Chris
I was thinking the same. As for the grade, the photos are far from ideal, but from what we can see, there is significant chatter in a prime focal area; the attached photo, which also is far from ideal, should better show this. As it stands, and with all things considered, this is not one that I would bother to certify.
It looks to me like it's not in an "UNCIRCULATED" case. It's a nice coin to have, but not really worth it to send off for grading.
To me, this is a coin that should be left in the holder it's in. I also don't see any value in having it graded, even if left in the same holder.
Let's see a better set of photos and see how the toning is on the obverse. If it is dark black toning--forget grading it. If it has rainbow toning (and that might be the case from the inconclusive photo) it is worth grading it.