can someone tell me about what grade this unc quater might get, i think it should do well i've wasted plenty of money trying to get that one home rum i'm looking for "GOD BLESS PCGS'S HEART"
The obverse usually carries more weight than the reverse, so it would help a lot if you posted both sides. Chris
Meow was under the impression that one needed to know the date of the coins as TPGs take that into account when grading. As certain years had mostly poor strikes etc.
sorry guys i live in the country and inernet is spotty , it's a 1968 , and no i'm just tired of spending money at PCGS and not getting the grade i think it should be, but whats funny is the ones i don't think will get a high grade do and the one i think will DO NOT , hummm i'm for some reason having trouble uploading more pics i just can't get it down doing that.
If you have the resources, and are only really looking at one or a couple types, you might want to, as cheaply as possible, get a grading set. I've done this to some degree and it can help. Basically, say for Washington clad quarters (omitting the ones that tend not to be minted strongly), pick up one in each grade from 61-68. That's eight coins that will give you visual examples on real coins that a tpg has graded. Stick with blast white types, so you don't have toning confounding things. Use them with a grading book to try to identify the 'flaws' that get them put into a grade. At shows, sometimes you might find some cheap ones, there are always a number selling of modern ones in low to mid-MS.