1846 Seated Liberty Dollar

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by gamster, Jan 11, 2009.

  1. gamster

    gamster New Member

    Hello all, I'm new to this forum which I found while doing research on some coins I have come across. Sorry if this is not the correct place to post this thread. I would appreciate any and all input concerning the authenticity or not of this coin.

    I have tried the magnet test which I read on this site and the coin does not stick to the magnet. I have also tried the sound test by holding the coin flat on my finger tip and gently striking the edge with a penny. I belive it sounds the way a silver coin should sound. However, this is all new to me and trying to learn.

    Thank you in advance for the help.
     

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  3. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    Sorry but it's not real. The date is really strange looking.
    It must be a copy.
     
  4. Joshycfl

    Joshycfl Senior Member

    nice coin, if its real. I know very little about these.
     
  5. Leadfoot

    Leadfoot there is no spoon

    Larry's right. Not real. 6 is all wrong. So are dentils. A bad countefeit.
     
  6. gamster

    gamster New Member

    thank you for the prompt responses... oh well

    i thought i had hit one, it's interesting that it passed the magnet and sound test.
     
  7. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    You can weigh it , it should weigh 26.73 grams , something about the date doesn't look right , but that's just my opinion , I'll go look atsome others like it at Heratige .
    rzage
     
  8. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    I agree with the others - fake. Looks like a Chinese counterfeit.
     
  9. gamster

    gamster New Member

    I see what you folks mean by the date now. The "6" is definetly off, looks like a upside 9. Another thing I will keep in mind to look for, thanks.
     
  10. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    Sorry the others are right the date is way off not even the same style of Number used on the real ones . Go to Ha.com and compare it to some originals .
    rzage
     
  11. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    They are actually using silver blanks of the correct weight , the Chinese are getting real good but blew it on the date on this one .
    rzage
     
  12. gamster

    gamster New Member

    seems scary, especially for a newbie like me :\
     
  13. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    That's why on exspensive coins like these , I'll only buy certified or from a trusted dealer , But you'll learn a lot about counterfeits here , there were some threads a little while ago where people would post their counterfeits and how you could tell they were fakes , but a good way is comparing it to a real example , so go to Ha.com and sign up , it's free and is also good for a lot of other things such as pop. reports , prices etc.
    rzage:cool:
     
  14. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    The spurrious metal in stars 2 through 5 don't help either. A quite obvious fake...to the experienced eye. I can see how a novice would get taken in by it.
     
  15. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    The quick-n-dirty on this one is the cut into the LI of LIBERTY. This obverse, with various dates, has been used on numerous Chinese forgeries and is known as the "gashed shield" fake. Even without that diagnostic, it is fairly easy to out as a fake: granularity/pitting on the rims and dentils; pits in Liberty's shoulder; the bad numbers in the date (6 and 4); raised bumps in the fields, esp. on rev; fat/mushy lettering, with numerous defects, esp. on rev.; basically it's a mushy, granular mess.
     
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