More Fakes, 1922 Dollar, Trade Dollar, Silver Round

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by jhinton, Feb 9, 2013.

  1. jhinton

    jhinton Well-Known Member

    While posting pictures of fake US Philippine Coins,( http://www.cointalk.com/t222428/ ) and ( http://www.cointalk.com/t211560/ )I thought I would also go ahead and post these.

    The first is a fake 1922 Peace dollar I bought from a merchant in Afghanistan. The merchant insisted that it was real and I had to pay dearly to get it (seriously, I had to pay a lot) but I wanted it for my study group. The Coin weighs 18.2 grams. it has an obvious brass colored rim on both the obverse and reverse.

    Fake 1922 Obverse.jpg Fake 1922 Reverse.jpg


    The Second is a fake 1878 trade dollar. It is struck and not cast and it weighs 17.1 grams. This was also obtained in Afghanistan but by someone else.

    Fake 1878 Trade Dollar.jpg Fake 1878 Trade Dollar Reverse.jpg
     
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  3. jhinton

    jhinton Well-Known Member

    This is a fake one ounce silver round. It was also purchased in Afghanistan but by someone else. It weighs 17.1 grams and is made of pot metal.

    Fake Silver round obverse.jpg Fake SIlver round reverse.jpg

    This same obverse, slightly modified was also used to make fake morgan dollars.
     
  4. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Cool stuff. The Trade Dollar looks better than most fake Trade Dollars.
     
  5. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    Moral of the story: don't buy coins in Afghanistan.
     
  6. Tyler

    Tyler Active Member

    You were literally in Afghanistan?
     
  7. Ripley

    Ripley Senior Member

    [​IMG][​IMG]
    Red Chinese counterfeit.
     
  8. Troodon

    Troodon Coin Collector

    That one just doesn't look right (which I guess makes sense, since it isn't). General rule that will serve you well: if it looks too good to be true, it probably isn't. If it looks too bad to be true, it definitely isn't.

    No offense to the OP BTW, but I think you wasted money big time on that Peace dollar. I appreciate you want to educate people on how to spot fakes, but that fake is so obvious even an inexperienced collector could have spot it. Doesn't make a good example. A fake good enough to fool even someone with expertise, now that would be worth having as an example.
     
  9. kaosleeroy108

    kaosleeroy108 The Mahayana Tea Shop & hobby center

    why the fuke would attempt to buy american silver coinage in all places afganistan???? you know your getting counterfiets....
     
  10. jloring

    jloring Senior Citizen

    Of course the OP knew, but he wanted them for study purposes. It's interesting (and quite a learning experience) to compare fakes of different origins, as U.S. coinage is counterfeited all over the world, not just in China.
     
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