Everyone is entitled to their opinion

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by coinzip, Nov 21, 2014.

  1. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    I figured that.
     
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  3. sheepscrossing

    sheepscrossing Junior Member

    As a newby I would say that the G06 grading is a little tough. How can y'all see the overstrike? I always have trouble seeing those.
     
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  4. coinzip

    coinzip Well-Known Member

    If this coin was an early die state, which it is no, the over date would look something like this.

    [​IMG]
     
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  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    What it is graded often depends on whether you are buying or selling... : - )
     
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  6. sheepscrossing

    sheepscrossing Junior Member

    thanks coinzip, now that you've shown an example I can see a portion of the original numeral by zooming in closely on the date.
     
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  7. Weston

    Weston Well-Known Member

    Wow, wouldn't have guessed that. Personally would buy as a VG10 coin.
     
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  8. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I agree with the 6 but would pay a bit more.
     
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  9. Weston

    Weston Well-Known Member

    Actually, upon further inspection... Unknown.jpeg Unknown-1.jpeg They called this a VG10. Bust halves are tough to grade sometimes cause of those weak strikes!
     
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  10. coinzip

    coinzip Well-Known Member

    The 1812 pictured is a LDS (late die state) which means the dies were in the late stage of their life. Often LDS coins have little or no dentils, which is usually interpreted as wear. Once again if you look at the eagles left wing or the wing on your right, it looks VF to me.
     
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  11. Joe2007

    Joe2007 Well-Known Member

    I'm thinking they were too harsh in this instance.
     
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  12. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    You have to be careful judging capped bust halves by the rims. Later die stages on many varieties can be lacking denticals/rims even on high grade coins.
     
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  13. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I agree, but the obverse lacking any ear detail, couple with the fact the reverse showed a full strike, is why I said VG8. I agree G was harsh as an overall grade for the coin.
     
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  14. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    So what is this saying? Some private company grades on their own rules, then puts out examples of their own rules. Well of course they will know their own rules better than others. What happens when they change them to make more money though? When they simply replace all of these photos with new ones to encourage more crackouts and resubmissions, will you still be fine with "theirs is the best rules to follow"? I sure wish I could get into a business model where I can change the rules at my whim to maximize my shareholder returns. Sounds very profitable.

    Edit: Sorry Morgandude if this sounded too cranky. I have been working all day. I didn't mean for it to come across that way.
     
    Last edited: Nov 23, 2014
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  15. KSorbo

    KSorbo Well-Known Member

    It does sound very profitable until they change the rules one too many times. Then the whole exercise will become meaningless.
     
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  16. rhady11

    rhady11 New Member

    hey can someone help me... im new to cointalk and i want to make a new post but dont know how so could someone message me and explain to me how to make a new post?
     
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  17. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    I'll be honest, the picture shows a G4 coin if you grade it strictly. G6 would be acceptable (as PCGS calls it), but I can't see it any higher than that. I might be willing to pay more, but lets call a spade a spade and then haggle over price.

    I know a lot of specialists like to claim that strike variations due to the different die marriages must be considered. I myself am a student of the Capped Bust series. However, when we are talking about grades this low, the differences in character due to die marriage become irrelevant - the amount of detail shows a G coin, and that's it. For me personally, hashing things out below EF just doesn't make sense. It doesn't matter that, even in UNC, the coin is missing half its detail. Once its circulated, the coin can completely bypass EF and VF and go straight to an F coin - if that is how much detail remains, then that is the grade the coin gets.
     
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  18. JPeace$

    JPeace$ Coinaholic

    I agree with your statement Jason. I don't know if that will ever happen as it seems this hobby attracts people who like to argue the minutia at any level.
     
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  19. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    what you describe sir is exactly how ancients are graded. We ignore things like weak strikes and simply grade based upon how much detail is left, regardless of the reason. I agree with your point of view entirely, which is why I like collecting ancients more. I understand what US collectors are saying, I simply just don't CARE why the detail is not there, just that its not.
     
  20. PAC

    PAC Active Member

    Agreed on this. My grade was G06 for the original coin, but I can see why someone would pay more than average for the grade for that one.
     
  21. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    That's why I called it a VG as well.
     
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