What does PCGS mean by this ?

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Mojavedave, Jan 29, 2015.

  1. Mojavedave

    Mojavedave Senior Member

    1938-D Walking Liberty Half ungradable. Looks to be a VF coin to me. Why would they not be able to give it any grade from AG - F ?
     

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  3. wcoins

    wcoins GEM-ber

  4. Mojavedave

    Mojavedave Senior Member

    So do 3rd party graders refuse to grade any cleaned coins ?
     
  5. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    Could mean many things. Cleaned, quizzed etc. all of them basically mean that the coin has altered surfaces. The good thing is that you know the coin is genuine if it is in a slab. You just need to decide if you like the look of the coin and go from there.
     
  6. Chiefbullsit

    Chiefbullsit CRAZY HORSE

    PCGS has a chart for problem coins at their website.
     
    Last edited: Jan 29, 2015
  7. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    They will not assign a number grade, but usually the will give a details grade like AU Details, cleaned.
     
  8. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    Can't say about the others but ANAC's will grade cleaned coins and give a "Details" label.
     
  9. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

  10. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    I have a question on same topic. Would PCGS not assign a grade because it was not mentioned on the submission form that it was cleaned? Reason for asking is because ANAC's will assign a grade regardless.
     
    coinman1234 likes this.
  11. Tom B

    Tom B TomB Everywhere Else

    92 is commonly used for cleaning and that coin sure does look like it might have been cleaned.
     
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  12. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Good gosh yes it does. Looks polished, actually, (basically a specific type of harsh cleaning).
     
  13. carboni7e

    carboni7e aka MonsterCoinz

    You can choose on the submission form whether to holder Genuine coins, add Genuine with details (default) or Genuine with no details.
     
    tommyc03 and -jeffB like this.
  14. Benna

    Benna New Member

  15. Morgandude11

    Morgandude11 As long as it's Silver, I'm listening

    It will not get a numerical grade, and that one should not. It is definitely cleaned.
     
  16. swamp yankee

    swamp yankee Well-Known Member

    Looks like she had a date w/ Dremel tool,a shame.
     
  17. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    PCGS classifies problems coins using the term, "Genuine", in the same way that NGC uses the term , "Details". The biggest difference between the two is that PCGS does not assign a grading category (MS, AU, EF, etc.) and NGC does.

    Chirs
     
  18. George Corell

    George Corell Member

    At the risk of going against the grain, I think it should receive a numerical grade. There is nothing gained by eliminating the grade while at the same time providing the grade helps anybody buying such a coin has expert knowledge of the grade it is even though it has been cleaned.

    Actually, I think this coin was dipped. I do not see the evidence of an abrasive having been used.
     
  19. Coinchemistry 2012

    Coinchemistry 2012 Well-Known Member

    So some history first...

    1. Once upon a time when I first started collecting coins, cleaned coins would not be slabbed at all and would be returned in a body bag.

    2. More recently (probably 5 years or so), the services started to permit coins that had problems such as cleaning. Initially, PCGS would only certify them to be genuine as here.

    3. Much, much more recently, PCGS and NGC introduced details grading.
     
  20. Coinchemistry 2012

    Coinchemistry 2012 Well-Known Member

    That coin has had much more than just a dip. Look at the surfaces and how it reflects light.
     
  21. treylxapi47

    treylxapi47 Well-Known Member Dealer

    One word.

    Market grading.

    If we can let problems slide on desirable or rare coins to establish a monetary value. Why can't we quantify those same problems with common coins.

    Same principle.

    If it's AU and harshly cleaned, slap VF-35 on the slab.

    AU and 'counting wheel damage' only slightly visible on the reverse, maybe an XF-45?

    It's what everyone wants anyway, and it's already being done to the rare dates, pedigrees, and desirable series.
     
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