Yep, just like that 1889-CC with the added mint mark. You said , " Reverse lettering extremely crude. Eagle is out of proportion", but it was a real silver dollar. It just had the mint mark added. I guess that somehow distorted the rest of the coin.
Oh, I am wrong, but wasn't wrong about the two coins being fake. One had an added mintmark, and the other one is a very bad Chinese fake. Thanks for advertising my perfection--it is really gratifying.
OK? I quoted you word for word and the results were exactly as I stated. I may not be a Morgan expert, but I have 2 descent eyes in my head and I can understand English. The 1889 had perfect "reverse lettering". After all, it was a real coin. The eagle was in perfect proportion. It was an authentic coin. The owner of 1879 says the coin is nearly perfect and demonstrates it with pictures/overlays. 6 posters here agree is is nearly perfect, yet you sa it is an obvious fake. Well, believe as you wish as will the rest of us.
Getting back to the OP's question of selling his fake trade dollar... if he stamps "COPY" on the coin, it can legally be sold on Amazon or a number of other sites. However, the "going rate" for non-silver replicas is less than $2.00, so hardly worth the effort. Here's one on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Replica-U-S-T...397&sr=8-71&keywords=ixwisdom+collection+coin
Well Morgandude, I think it is about time you put a cork in it. While I admit others have personalized it, to suggest you didn't, is around the 5'th error on this thread alone you have made. Do I need to highlight where you personalized things and prove you wrong again? I hope not. Now would be a good time for you to post that picture of that crow again that you should be eating, we can all laugh and you can exit this thread with at least some dignity.
Its Saturday evening , so lets play nice~ put the hissy-fits away , put a smilie to each other and enjoy the evening with family or something rather than coins and disputes. Thanks gentlemen, Jim
Same here, Jim. We are good with each other. and we're all collectors who sometimes get carried away with our love of coins. Apology sent here.