The 1920's era was a miserable one for Lincoln lovers. Dies were over used, planchet quality and mix were poor. Many have atrocious spotting and inconsistent color. Here are five examples. All have graded cleanly at PCGS. All as full RD. Can you put them in order, from MS63 to MS67? One for each grade. Comments are welcome. No doubt there will be differences of opinion on color. But focus on grade, keeping in mind that TPG's account for die state and usually market-grade. And remember that these are large images with exaggerated flaws. No prize for the first winner other than gloating privileges. Lance.
67 1926- 66 1927- 65 1926-D (one heck of a strike particularly for a 26) 64 1925-D 63 1922-D Problem is that I wound up with 2 65's. I had to guess which one had the better luster.
I definitely cannot, but here's my guess anyways. MS63 - 22D MS64 - 26D MS65 - 25D MS66 - 27 MS67 - 26 When do we get the correct answer?
We should give it a day or two, don't you think? Give enough forum members a chance to guess. Thanks, Lance.
man alive i could begin to reckon this. but i know for certain that they are mighty fine looking and one should be proud to have them. if we have a day or two i will take a better look when not exhausted and attempt my first photograding
63 - 22D 64 - 26D 65 - 25D 66 - 27 67 - 26 In other words, I agree with the farmer. I am guessing there is a suprise in store for us. Something makes me think that the 26D might have been graded higher than 64 for some reason.
Thanks Lance. These are fun as well as educational. The last one especially because of the various types, metals, and a big span on the years, even century. I wish there was some way to see the edges better, but hey, can't have everything. I'm guessing that the rough rim on the 1927 is actually the plastic from the slab. Thanks again. Chuck
I agree with SirCharlie. I am sure I will regret not agreeing with RLM, and the 26 versus 27 was th hardest for me to decide, but the 27 just looks overall cleaner than the 26 for top grade.
Time for a couple of hints, and answers tomorrow. - Yes, the Philadelphia coins are the 66 and 67. No shocker there. - One coin was surprisingly undergraded by PCGS, by at least one point, some say two. Revise your guesses if you'd like to. Lance.
Correct, SirCharlie. There is a vinyl gasket that surrounds the slab and it can make a rim look like it has flaws. Someday there will be a better solution. Not sure NGC's prong holder is it. Lance.
Last call before announcing the results. Any more guesses? Please see the additional hints above! Lance.