Walking Liberty Half Dollars

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Rick B, Jul 12, 2020.

  1. Rick B

    Rick B Well-Known Member

    If your other post about someone ignoring you was about me not answering this post, well I get dozens of cointalk emails a day and don't get to all of them. I have a life outside of coins. And I've discussed my thoughts on raw coins ad infinitum in other threads.
    Also, probably half my posts go unanswered. If I blocked everyone that doesn't answer my posts, I'd be very lonely on cointalk, LOL!

    I realize there is more chance of a coin getting damaged outside of a slab. I'm willing to take that chance. Would you like a full explanation of my opinion about this? If so, I'd like a promise that you will understand it's just my opinion, and don't take it as an attack on slabbing! A couple of guys before took it that way and started abusing me!
     
    capthank likes this.
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  3. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    Nobody abused you, stop crying.
     
  4. imrich

    imrich Supporter! Supporter

    For coin authenticity proof.
     
    Last edited: Jul 30, 2020
  5. Rick B

    Rick B Well-Known Member

    That would be reason to keep the label, but the broken smashed plastic?
     
  6. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    For posting pictures of a cracked slab on CT. Expect to get many likes :)
     
  7. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    Double post.
     
    Last edited: Jul 30, 2020
  8. Mountain Man

    Mountain Man Well-Known Member

    Neither are worth anything but to remind what you had as you can't prove that specific coin came from that specific broken slab or label.
     
    capthank likes this.
  9. Rick B

    Rick B Well-Known Member

    Unless one photos it while in the slab. It's not hard to tell if it's the same coin. Marks, hairlines, etc would be exact and prove that it's the same coin, it seems to me.
     
  10. micbraun

    micbraun coindiccted

    An experienced collector/dealer will look at the coin and know what it’s worth or which grade it may receive.
     
  11. Rick B

    Rick B Well-Known Member

    Yes, but if a private individual wanted to buy it, they could look at the before and after photos, see that it's the same coin, and trust the label.
    In any case, I'm not planning on selling.
     
  12. Rick B

    Rick B Well-Known Member

    Jail break!
    See attached.
    I didn't realize a piece was missing until I photographed this!
     

    Attached Files:

    micbraun likes this.
  13. imrich

    imrich Supporter! Supporter

    I may be just too fastidious, it's part of my "training"! I forgot that some labels can't be removed from slab without generating several pieces. My method shows both the TPG and coin identification which some buyers request.
     

    Attached Files:

    capthank likes this.
  14. capthank

    capthank Well-Known Member

    Lets hope not but if so I hope I am there to buy them from the teller.
     
    LA_Geezer likes this.
  15. capthank

    capthank Well-Known Member

    That's the way I try to break mine outl
     
    imrich likes this.
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