1953 S Franklin, did the newbie do okay

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by eteller, Jul 29, 2010.

  1. eteller

    eteller Junior Member

    Recent ebay purchase, just one more Franklin half to go!! This was listed as GEM BU, paid $36. Did I do okay?
     

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  3. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    I wouldn't say it makes Gem, TPGs would probably say 64. Struck with very worn out dies and likely dipped recently. But for $36 you did OK.
     
  4. statequarterguy

    statequarterguy Love Pucks

    Nice pastel toning and my birth year. edited
     
  5. Tater

    Tater Coin Collector

    I think it looks nice. The hit on the obverse will keep it from GEM grade, but the price is fair.
     
  6. eteller

    eteller Junior Member

    Thanks guys!
     
  7. Numismatist47

    Numismatist47 New Member

    AS Doug said, dipped recently, but $36 not too bad. This is one for haggling because it was dipped.
     
  8. Kryptonitecomic

    Kryptonitecomic New Member

    It may be just the pics but the coin looks to have had more than a dipping done to it? I can't judge how much cleaning was done to it if it the coin was even whizzed but it looks processed and seems to almost have a matte proof finish on it which tells me there could be potential problems. Again....no way to give a definitive opinion based solely on photo's so it may be just dipped.
     
  9. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    I think what you're seeing is the orange peel effect from being struck with worn out dies.
     
  10. Kryptonitecomic

    Kryptonitecomic New Member

    It's absolutely orange peel I agree....I have just seen that affect on processed coins as well but it absolutely could be a product of degraded dies :bigeyes:
     
  11. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    To my knowledge there is no method by which the orange peel effect itself can be duplicated either accidentally or on purpose. If you know of one I'd sure be interested in seing one of those examples.

    But I have no doubt there are plenty of coins that already had the orange peel effect that have had some sort of coin doctoring done to them.
     
  12. Kryptonitecomic

    Kryptonitecomic New Member

    Some acidic dips can actually cause microscopic pitting across the entire surface of the coin and in hand it looks like orange peel but under a loop it looks like thousands of little dimples like you would find on a golf ball. I don't dip coins so I am unfamiliar with the different products but I had a guy at a flea market show me the process once.
     
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