That is not a good reason for calling it genuine. C/F's made with transfer dies duplicate the genuine coin. Most of the stuff on this thread are crude fakes with no relation to genuine specimens. Edit: "Genuine" was already posted.
I greatly appreciate posts like this and would like to see more. Always being up-dated and educated on these "contemporary counterfeits" keeps me on my toes when looking for new pieces to my collection. Thank you.
SMH, so there IS a 1896-o micro-o but this is one shown is fake. Educate me further on this. When is a mirco-o real and when is a mirco-o fake ? What am I looking for ? Also what was the weight is THIS Morgan ?
I hear that the Chinese are attempting to slip legitimate Capped Busts into The Contemporary Counterfeit Capped Bust Half Dollar Club.
I have a new book coming out soon (Forgotten Coins) which TALKS about all of this from a scientific standpoint (Material Analysis - XRF) and not the boring and typical historical one. Via Amazon Books. Early 2017. Guaranteed no more confusion <VVBG>. John Lorenzo Numismatist United States
Looking through some of my old U.S. coins, after seeing this thread. This Trime don't look right to me. The wear pattern/design on the obverse and reverse look off. Counterfeit I assume?
This looks bad - shape of date digits. If you have owned it longer than twenty years, I'll bet it is contemporary (WOW!) and a really deceptive one!
@Insider is right about the date. Doesnt look right at all. Also shows uneveness in with the stars. You need to weigh it and I cant tell from the pics but does it have a yellowish color to it. This would mean it is probably made from german silver. With the very few that were made and high value of a real one, it could be chinese. If it is a CC than it is a very good one.
1880-O: About 50% of the genuine mintage have the normal-O, the other 50% have a micro-o. 1899-O About 80% of the genuine mintage have the normal-O, the other 20% have the micro-o. (Very scarce in higher grades). These are the only two genuine micro-o Morgan Silver Dollars. The weights of the VAM-listed vintage Morgan Dollar counterfeits are generally correct, and they have the full content of silver (sometimes even a little bit better than .900 fine).
Thank you I want to continue to learn about things like this all the time so I know what to look for.