This is why the influx of new folks, who have no idea what they are looking for / at, keep happening. https://www.workandmoney.com/s/most...urce=tab&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=msn-msn-home https://www.workandmoney.com/s/most...urce=tab&utm_medium=cpc&utm_term=msn-msn-home This article came up front and center when I opened the browser at work. Instant millionaires in the making . . . . . . Z
We went through a spell last year where every other post was a Rockwell Test divot. I swear people were shooting cents with BB guns in their backyard and posting them here as Rockwell test coins. I went out and found a YouTube star (huh??) that was making people froth at the mouth over cents with divots in them. The fellow was dramatic as a B-reel actor.
I thought the hardness tests were conducted on the die steel. If my understanding is correct, then the "blemishes" on the coins would be raised, wouldn't they? So, BB guns would be useless.
I ran a quick search on the Rockwell hardness test, and there were several threads but I didn't read them all. I chose the one below because it was started by *Bob's Tavern Arm* whom we all "love and disrespect". https://www.cointalk.com/threads/can-you-tell-a-real-rockwell-test.341023/#post-3574607
To be fair, if you actually click through the linked slideshow, the coins shown are legitimate collectibles, like 1922-Plain, 1793 Large Cent, bronze war Lincolns, etc ... and the author does point out that condition affects value, too. Sure, some will view it and swear they have the same matte proof they see in the picture, but it's still a cut above the road kill "errors" you see on youTube.
This, IMO, is mostly a generational thing. I'm old. The first pocket calculator I encountered in school was in college and it had 4 functions and took 6 D-cell batteries. The younger generations, those born after 1979, many asking these questions about errors, have grown up with the internet, google, wiki, etc. Instant info. Who cares if it's accurate? "It must be correct and true, its on the internet", right? Too quick to ask the wrong question and argue when they don't get the answer they want. I blame the educational system mostly. Kids are being taught the answers to the test questions to pass the finals. Not how to logically research a question and search for the answer, from multiple sources and draw their own conclusion. Instead, we see a plethora of Parrots. Very few of today's graduates have any idea about a process to solve a problem other then the internet. But, I ramble... One of my favorite quotes is "The smartest person in the room is not the one with the all the answers, its the one with all the right questions".
Virtual reality is upon us I only hope that millenials can handle it as they are our future! Thanks for the post
I hope so as well. With all the current events, it doesn't look likely though. We, pre-millenials, may never know the truth. We'll either be gone or the revisionest will rewrite history. Sad situation we're in.
It's a bit off the original topic but I always try to be a positive person. In my experience, if you look hard enough, you can always find something positive. Even in the worst situation and outcome, the positive is you have the opportunity to learn what not to do. The best lessons I've learned in life were usually from the worst decisions or mistakes I've made.