I like sliders actually

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Irespire, Jan 15, 2009.

  1. Irespire

    Irespire Senior Member

    I have a few mid grade expensive MS coins in my set but it's become clear that, at least for my set, toned sliders are a lot better. Mostly because I can afford a rarer date that will increase more in value, two, the wear is hard to spot especially on a toned coin, and three, I have a lot of holes to fill, and I'm not rich. I just purchased an anacs au-58 1892 barber quarter which was amazingly toned and I'm gonna crack it for my album once it gets here. Then, maybe in the future, I'll replace it with a nice AU semi-key.

    Anyway, that's my thought for the day.
     
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  3. Irespire

    Irespire Senior Member

  4. Joshycfl

    Joshycfl Senior Member

    I like anything nicely priced! I just look for good deals
     
  5. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    Oh yeh!!!
    Sliders (AU-58 and -55) are great coins to build a collection around.
    You end up with a set that looks MS- (except to the pros), but at a fraction of the cost.
     
  6. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    You made me curious, so I went and checked my type set.
    My type set is my pride and joy.
    It breaks down this way:
    Total of 82 coins

    MS - 19 coins
    AU - 47 coins
    XF - 13 coins
    VF - 3 coins

    That means about 57% of my typeset grades AU.
    I didn't break it down further (58, 55, 53, 50)
     
  7. clembo

    clembo A closed mind is no mind

    In many cases an AU58 can have much better eye appeal than say an MS60 or 61.

    A lot less contact marks with just a hint of rub.
     
  8. mralexanderb

    mralexanderb Coin Collector

    There's nothing wrong with sliders. They're usually beautiful coins and we all like beautiful coins.

    Bruce
     
  9. mgChevelle

    mgChevelle AMERICAN

    for my 100 post I'll ask a question. What do you mean by "sliders", I'm curious
     
  10. ranchhand

    ranchhand Coin Hoarder

    I concur!
    I will take an AU-58 over an ms60-62 any day... most MS-60's are UGLY!
    here is one of my favorite au-58's
     

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  11. ranchhand

    ranchhand Coin Hoarder

    Sliders are coins that are so close to being mint state that they can fool most people, usually they grade at AU-58.
    they just "slid" past mint state...
     
  12. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    The term comes from the days before coin albums.
    Many collectors back then kept their coins in flat wooden trays with square or circular holes that they could place their coin in.
    The holes were often lined with something like velvet.
    The holes didn't keep the coins tightly in place, so they slid around as the trays were pull out from or pushed into cabinets that held them.
    So as the coins slid around there was friction even with velvet.
    The friction was just enough to break the surface finish on the coins taking them from MS to AU-58.
    Naturally they ended up being called "sliders".

    Nowadays the cause is often different but the result is the same.
     
  13. Joshycfl

    Joshycfl Senior Member


    I thought they were the mini-burger crave...


    But what you said works well too.
     
  14. mgChevelle

    mgChevelle AMERICAN

    thanks. I learn so much on this forum, its awesome
     
  15. ranchhand

    ranchhand Coin Hoarder

    kanga; while i have heard this one before, and is the origin of the term, why would a lot of the AU-58 coins i see have faint wear on both sides of the coin?
     
  16. FreakyGarrettC

    FreakyGarrettC Wise young snail

    Did you complete a 7070?
     
  17. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    I agree. Coins always seem to be priced so that a higher grade coin costs more than a lower grade coin. If there is such a thing as a bargain coin, AU58 might be it.
     
  18. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Because the previous owners often did not replace the coin back in the tray with the same side up all the time.
     
  19. ranchhand

    ranchhand Coin Hoarder

    I guess that makes sense, but i wonder what percentage of "sliders" where worn this way? is it possible for a coin to enter circulation just long enough to get "58"-ed?

    regardless, AU-58 is still one of my favorite grades... if i can;t afford high grade MS ;)
     
  20. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Of course, and many times that is the reason for an AU grade. But to the trained eye wear from circulation has a different look than cabinet rub. And no I can't explain it, it is one of those things that you have see with 2 coins side by side in order to understand it. And pics seldom work for this.
     
  21. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    Doug:
    I understand what you mean. There is a different 'look' to the cabinet friction coin vs the lightly circulated piece.

    [note: 176 to go].
     
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