when I first started collecting again back in 2000 ,I ran into abon sgsgrading services ,coins and purchased this war Nickel set pretty decent to me from the way it was kept I wanted to purchase the coins not the holder, I tried to get the stuff now I want to get it recertified... sure just bring it out the slides or leave it as it is just keep the set in the little /
Most war nickels in MS66 have a book value around $30; in 67, they go up to $60-80, and in 68 they're quite valuable. Do you have enough experience to judge whether a coin will make 68? If not, you're throwing $30 per coin of good money after bad (maybe $15 if you use ANACS). There are people here who can make that judgement, but not from photos so blurry that you can't even make out the dates. (I will say, though, that the color of the coins I see makes me skeptical that they're even uncirculated.)
My experience with Jefferson nickels is decent ,I am almost done with my last Ana course... Although I have done most of the questions from meme
Yea I figured as much , she grading went outta business when there pawn shop they. Where working out of got raided by the fbi
bottom line is the slab in question is seen as less then a raw coin in the market place as they often put in problem / processed coins with a fantasy MS number. I would suggest not slabbing these coins with a top tier firm. If the coins are stable and you like them that's what counts.
Well, you do have a couple of true rarities there... SGS slabs with a grade of less than MS70. In all seriousness, I agree completely with @-jeffB. Much clearer pictures of individual coins would be necessary to even begin to properly answer you. But, the odds aren't in your favor in any case, so I'd say just leave them be.