I got the bug...42-d overdate?

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by miedbe7, Mar 11, 2013.

  1. miedbe7

    miedbe7 Wayward Collector

    So I was on ebay a couple of nights ago and bought this 1942-d because I thought I saw something underneath the 2 in the date. I know I'm taking a gamble bc the BIN price was ridiculous ($9+$3S/H). I ask your guys help in this and help me understand what I'm seeing here...

    Auction picture (Picture is zoomable):

    1942-D Possible 41 ebay pics obv.jpg

    And now these are the pictures I got using my ultra-cheapo Chinese usb scope:

    42dobv1.jpg 42dobv2.jpg 42dobv3.jpg

    I'll draw this up to a relatively cheap education if it proves to be nothing, which I'm 75% sure it is. But then again, there's a reason I gambled, I'm still seeing "something"

    What do you all see? Thanks!
     
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  3. KoinJester

    KoinJester Well-Known Member

    Some of the tell tale signs in the 4 should be doubled along with the MM also or repunched
     
  4. mrweaseluv

    mrweaseluv Supporter! Supporter

    looks like you scored to me but I am no expert. Hope you're right about the overdate. I'm sure one of our more knowledgable members will speak up shortly :D
     
  5. miedbe7

    miedbe7 Wayward Collector

    Here is the mintmark, sorry...

    From the seller (Picture is zoomable):

    1942-D possible 41 ebay pics rev.jpg

    With my digiscope:

    42drev1.jpg 42drev2.jpg
     
  6. K2Coins

    K2Coins GO GATORS

    I have a coin that looks IDENTICAL to yours miedbe7... im curious of what people might think
     
  7. Yacorie

    Yacorie Junior Member

    That certainly looks like something is going on in all the right places - I sure hope it is
     
  8. jhinton

    jhinton Well-Known Member

    It does not look like the 1942/1-D to me.
     
  9. miedbe7

    miedbe7 Wayward Collector

    Thanks for the input so far. I'm pessimistic about my prospects. With that mindset, I'll be pleasantly surprised if it turns out to be the real deal. :cool:
     
  10. kookoox10

    kookoox10 ANA #3168546

    The trailing die/deteriorated die variation of what you have is relatively common. Unfortunately it's not the overdate, keep hunting though! They are out there.
     
  11. miedbe7

    miedbe7 Wayward Collector

    Thanks for definitive word kookoox10. So I bought a harshly cleaned mercury dime in vf condition with $2.09 silver value for $12.45. I won't make that mistake again, that's for sure. :rolleyes:
     
  12. coinguy-matthew

    coinguy-matthew Ike Crazy

    No pain, no gain.....:axemeethead:
     
  13. pballer225

    pballer225 Member

    You could return it and get the $9 back, and then go buy a similar one from your coin shop or wherever for under $3 :)
     
  14. miedbe7

    miedbe7 Wayward Collector

    Eh, not worth the hassle. The seller didn't misrepresent the coin, although the pictures were juiced. The coin flip it was mailed in had BU written on it though, but no claims were made about condition in the auction listing. Just a seller looking for a bite on a high BIN IMO. I bit, but not for a vf mercury dime (I have plenty of those). I bit trying to cherrypick. :D
     
  15. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    So.... had this been the hoped for variety, and if the seller somehow later learned of the would-be value, should they be able to request a return? After all, fair is fair and this is basically the same as trying for a pick but returning if it's not a score.


    Kudos to the OP for playing the game as it should be; better luck next time.
     
  16. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    And if the seller listed it with a return policy, should the seller still be able to refuse returns?

    I think the OP's doing the right thing in this case, but if a seller lists items with a return policy of "14 days money back, buyer pays return shipping", and the buyer ships it back postpaid, that seller had darn well better issue a refund. Don't like it? Don't offer a return policy, and deal with the loss of bidders and eBay perks that that decision entails.

    Not to be confused with fake SNAD or other buyer dishonesty, of course.
     
  17. pballer225

    pballer225 Member

    There is nothing wrong with returning the coin. If the coin is returned, the $3 shipping fee the seller gets to keep, and it doesn't cost that much to ship a coin. Also, if the seller didn't want to accept returns, they could have easily listed the coin that way. I've returned several coins that had been juiced, and I don't feel bad about it at all.
     
  18. BooksB4Coins

    BooksB4Coins Newbieus Sempiterna

    So, being an ebay gambler yourself, do you seriously think it fair to knowingly and intentionally gamble, to keep only what is good for you, and return anything that does not personally benefit you? I did not say anything AGAINST generally accepting returns, so why respond as if I did?



    First, you know as well as I that "no returns" is meaningless. Second, returning because of juiced photos or some other description issue is totally different than doing so because you tried to pick and did not score. While generally speaking, there is nothing wrong with returning a coin, there is when you just want to have your cake and eat it too.
     
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