1834 $2.50 Quarter Eagle Gold Coin

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by pradaboy, May 6, 2014.

  1. pradaboy

    pradaboy Member

    Hi all! Thinking about purchasing the following coin, I was wondering how much I should spend and if it'd be worth getting graded and what you think it might grade as. Thanks for any input! coin1.jpg coin2.jpg
     
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  3. non_cents

    non_cents Well-Known Member

    Details look really off to me...either a fake, or a details coin I would think...
     
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  4. KoinJester

    KoinJester Well-Known Member

    From the pictures I'd pass. Don't like the looks of it.
     
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  5. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    Probably F-12 or so if it's real. I have my doubts; the denticles are pretty sharp for there to be so much wear on the rest of the coin, and the surface looks suspicious to me, it might be a cast copy. The details are a little mushy which also makes me suspect a copy rather than genuine wear.

    It would be worth about $365 if it's real. Personally I wouldn't touch something like this raw unless the dealer has an EXCELLENT reputation and a good return policy if it turns out to be fake.

    Even if it's real it doesn't have very good eye appeal for the grade. I'd pass if I were you.
     
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  6. fiatfiasco

    fiatfiasco Nasty Details Member

    I gotta be honest bud, I don't like the rim or the fields. My first impression was it is fake. Granted this is going off of a picture, but a true 1834 should have clear distinction between the flat portion of the rim, and the denticles.

    Does not look genuine to me.
     
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  7. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    There's an 1834 AU-details $2.50 on eBay, #181400126077, good coin to compare with the OP's.
     
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  8. Rick Stachowski

    Rick Stachowski Motor City Car Capital

    filed rim to me, reverse shows the best for that
     
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  9. Tom B

    Tom B TomB Everywhere Else

    It's either counterfeit or dug from the ground. Run.
     
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  10. Pcunix

    Pcunix Active Member

    Ayup. Definitely a bad looking coin.
     
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  11. josh's coins

    josh's coins Well-Known Member

    It appears to have quite a bit of bubbles on both sides of the coin. That screams fake. Then again that could be just the picture. Even so I would walk away. Do not think the risk is worth the reward there.
     
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  12. Collector1966

    Collector1966 Senior Member

    Fake. The hair should not be touching the date, among other things.

    1834 $2.50 gold obv.jpeg 1834 $2.50 gold rev.jpeg
     
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  13. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    My initial impression upon looking at the photos (even before reading the OPs post) was the coin is a counterfeit. I am not an expert with gold from this era...but this coin has a lot of porosity which is a tell-tale sign of a cast coin. I would avoid it at all costs.

    As I said, I am not an expert with this type...but this coin screams cast counterfeit to me.
     
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  14. pradaboy

    pradaboy Member

    Thank you all so much for your input! i thought something seemed a bit off, but I am new to coin collecting (especially gold) and am by no means any kind of expert. I really appreciate you all steering me in the right direction!
     
  15. Pcunix

    Pcunix Active Member

    By the way, Photograde is often worth checking for comparison. Sometimes you are lucky enough to find the same date, too!
     
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  16. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    Can I ask where you were looking at this coin? Does a dealer have it or is it from a private party?
     
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  17. doug444

    doug444 STAMPS and POSTCARDS too!

    A word about "dug" GOLD coins: in general, 100 years (or 500 years) in the ground does not cause this type of mottled, porous appearance. You may recall that some of the gold in the SS Central America graded MS63 and MS65 after 150 years in the ocean. Silver, yes; gold, no.
     
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  18. pradaboy

    pradaboy Member

    It was on an auction site. I won't mention their name. I have alerted them to your responses and they are looking into the matter.
     
  19. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    Ugly, but looks genuine to me . . . probably lost copper content to long term burial or immersion in a corrosive medium.
     
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