AGE Diameter Question

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by osklo, Feb 11, 2014.

  1. osklo

    osklo New Member

    Hello everyone,

    I noticed the diameter of my 1oz. 2009 American Gold Eagle measures just 32.65 mm rather than the 32.70 mm specified by the Mint. Does the fact that my coin's diameter deviates from the official specs automatically imply that the coin is fake or is it normal to expect some slight deviation in the diameter? (Everything else, as far as I can tell, looks Ok: the thickness look acceptable, and, according to my ~$40.00 scale, the coin weighs in at 33.97 g).

    Thank you,
    osklo
     
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  3. wcoins

    wcoins GEM-ber

    Diameter alone can't tell a fake, 0.05 mm could be just measuring error is not much. Try uploading a picture

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Feb 11, 2014
  4. osklo

    osklo New Member

    Thank you for your reply. (Cute graphics BTW).

    As mentioned in my post: "Everything else, as far as I can tell, looks Ok", i.e. my concern is specifically limited to the coin's diameter: does the fact that a coin's diameter diverges from the officially published specs imply that that coin is a fake? Or am I to understand that the diameter should fall within a range centered on the published spec, e.g. 32.70 mm +/- 0.05 mm?
     
  5. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    You are talking about five hundredths of a millimeter, this is likely due to an inaccurate measurement.
     
  6. osklo

    osklo New Member

    I have a second coin that measures exactly, with the same calipers, 32.7 mm.
     
  7. rysherms

    rysherms Alpha Member

    its totally fake. you got ripped off. its not even gold.
     
    Lorenzo Pappaceno likes this.
  8. osklo

    osklo New Member

    This comment is useless. It's neither helpful nor funny.
     
  9. rysherms

    rysherms Alpha Member

    no it is funny. because for such a science attentive person you seem to have missed the most frequent problem in analysis; accuracy. when you used the "same calipers" were you measuring across two reeds on one end of the first coin? Across two reeds on the opposite end? And what about the second coin, the new one in question? Touching only one reed on one end? Across two reeds on one end? Both ends? You are creating a thread about one "issue" with a coin, it's diameter, and of such a small statistical significance it is silly. I answered appropriately.
     
  10. rysherms

    rysherms Alpha Member

    further, you stated the thickness "looks acceptable". I mean, if you already have these handy calipers out, why did you not measure both to the hundredth of a millimeter for analysis?
     
  11. rysherms

    rysherms Alpha Member

    and further past further. if they are "acceptable", define "acceptable"....is "acceptable" one millionth of a millimeter? because i think 5/100 of a millimeter is acceptable considering the researcher taking the measurements.

    relax guy.
     
  12. wcoins

    wcoins GEM-ber

    With so many good fakes out there I'd have the same concern. Even if his question would have been bit silly, which I think it is not, we should consider we are talking about someone who has just joined today.
     
  13. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Diameter: 32.69 mm - 32.73 mm including tolerance
     
    definer likes this.
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