POP Quiz: How many moneyers made it to consul?

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by JBGood, Feb 19, 2015.

  1. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    I know a few:
    L. Marcus Philippus,
    Scrib. Libo.,
    Norbanus
    and my main man Cinna!

    Come on, people......I need a new list!
     
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  3. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    My dad worked at the Mint and he had a Ford Consul

    So any list should incude af's dad.

    [​IMG]
     
    Ardatirion, Bing, stevex6 and 2 others like this.
  4. dougsmit

    dougsmit Member

  5. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

  6. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    I LMFAO! I would drive a Consul forever!!
     
  7. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    Or, to be realistic, about a month till it broke down. :)
     
  8. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    I live in southern Ohio......I would PROUDLY put that CONSUL on my lawn!!
     
  9. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    He called it Napoleon because it was his first consul.

    I called it Nappy because it smelled of piss.


    It has just occurred to me that that won't make sense to an American because you call them daipers.
     
  10. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    Close enough!
     
  11. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Man, that Consul is a total winner (your Pa was a lucky fella, afantiques)...

    Yah, I'd love to sneak a V8 into that lil' darling (nobody would be suspecting Consul-Man to blast-off at the lights!!)

    => geeesh => a wolf in sheep's clothing (it would look kinda nasty with some sweet mags and the Snap-On-Tool girl laying on the hood)
     
  12. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    I don't have the Consul, but my Mustang can carry the consul.
    Mustang Pictures 009.jpg
     
    ro1974, John Anthony, zumbly and 4 others like this.
  13. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    NICE!! => that's a sweet, sweet ride, big brother ... my Dad had the same kinda car when we were growing-up (1965 Mustang) ... sadly, he sold it and bought a fricken Vega right before I got my driver's licence!!
     
  14. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    Bing, you are in my dream car! You can see 2 chicks eyeballing you in the background. Lucky Dawg!
     
  15. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    What a fabulous car, Bing! Did you restore it? Or did you purchase it restored? I need to hear the story...
     
  16. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    Me too!
     
  17. afantiques

    afantiques Well-Known Member

    OP, Roman Moneyers 1, jokes and old cars, 14.

    It's a sad indictment of the frivolity of the young (second childhoods count as 'young' )

    I do apologise for hi-jacking your thread., :)
     
  18. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    this was far more entertaining.
     
  19. Bing

    Bing Illegitimi non carborundum Supporter

    It's the third 1967 Mustang GT Convertible I've restored. Some more than others, but my favorite was my first. I painted it Brittany Blue, black interior, 289 four barrel carb. I sold it to a guy in Ireland who had it shipped to the emerald isles and almost immediately crashed and totaled the car. I was sent pictures of my baby by the guy who bought it for parts at a junk yard.

    My second and third were both candy apple red convertibles, both GTs with 289 engines. However, the middle car had three single carbs and could move like a scalded cat. I'd have to dig out pics since I do not have any digital images of any during restoration or completion.

    I can't do these any longer. Too much work and it's gets more expensive each time. And to add insult to injury, I have never been able to get the price that would make me break even not counting many hours by an expert mechanic (me). In 1989 I almost purchased a 1969 Boss 429 Mustang with only 37 miles on the odometer. Never driven, always garage kept out in Idaho. I thought he was asking too much at $55K, but two years later he sold it at auction in Phoenix for near $100K. Bad judgment on my part.

    Now coins are my only hobby and since they didn't have cars in the first century BC, how about an older means of transportation with something really wicked under the hood:

    M. VOLTEIUS M.F. REV.jpg M. VOLTEIUS M.F. OBV.jpg
    M. VOLTEIUS M.F. ROMAN REPUBLIC; GENS VOLTEIA
    AR Fouree Denarius
    OBVERSE: Laureate & helmeted bust of Attis right; shield behind
    REVERSE: Cybele seated right in chariot drawn by two lions; OQ above
    Rome 78BC
    2.9g, 18mm
    Cr385/4; Syd 777, Volteia 4
     
  20. JBGood

    JBGood Collector of coinage Supporter

    Now I'm totally bummed.
     
  21. John Anthony

    John Anthony Ultracrepidarian

    Does anyone ever financially "recover' all the hours they put into a hobby? I would say that's the wrong approach. It's entertainment money, enjoy it as such. You won't be taking it with you to the Great Unknown.
     
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