"Cleaned" coins--how much of a loss?

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Owle, Sep 14, 2015.

  1. Owle

    Owle Junior Member

    I picked up these two dimes from a local dealer relying on his expertise for accurate grading, both came back "improperly cleaned". How much of a loss is likely on these and is there any hope of getting them in a straight MS holder by letting them tone in one of those old brown envelopes?

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    http://i.imgur.com/fZJKKnt.jpg
     
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  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Did you buy them raw and submit them yourself? If so, have you discussed this with the dealer?

    Chris
     
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  4. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    Most dealers, including me, do not guarantee grades on raw coins. I have had some go from cleaned to straight grade, and the other way, when re-submitted.
     
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  5. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    I like the look of the barber dime, although I agree the high points on the obverse appear cleaned. If you were to store them in brown envelopes to try to re-tone them, I'd probably put a piece of mylar between the envelope and the reverse of the barber dime so that it doesn't tone up further on that side.
     
    Last edited: Sep 14, 2015
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  6. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    Personally, I think some people are way too fussy on whether or not some coin had some, remote trace of a touch up job years ago. I have seen numerous coins that were dipped, soaked, and even lightly polished that look just fine to me. The only cleaning I dislike is from abrasive techniques. Your "cleaned" coins look fine to me.
     
  7. Owle

    Owle Junior Member

    He sold both coins as MS63 and when encountered Ed was uninterested in any exchange or refund, I probably would have considered a 40% loss as worth taking considering all the trouble and potential expense in trying to get them into straight holders.
     
  8. olero

    olero Active Member

    I don't see how anyone could tell they were cleaned by just looking at the pictures.
    This why it is so hard for me to pull the trigger when buying on line. And if you buy a TPGed coin, I can't put them into a folder with out cracking it open.
     
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  9. Daniel Jones

    Daniel Jones Well-Known Member

    The reverse on the Barber dime has a slight, hazy look to it, ditto the obverse on the Seated dime. This is typical of dipping, or wiping.
     
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  10. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I would agree that a dealer selling raw coins should not have to guarantee a grade. However, improperly cleaned is not a GRADE, its a defect in the coin. Therefor, its fuzzier to me whether the dealer has an obligation here. On one hand its like a fake in that its not what it was sold as, and that is a collectible coin. OTOH, TPG's can be persnickety, and I would understand if dealers disagreed with them.

    So sorry, I am not clear myself what the dealer's responsibility is. OTOH, I know what YOUR responsibility should be OP, and that would be to learn WHY the TPG is calling it improperly cleaned so you can avoid this in the future.
     
  11. Owle

    Owle Junior Member

    They were bought raw as MS63 at a show. They could conceivably grade but real toning takes a long time in the brown holder with sulfur still present to react with the silver. Ed Doran says he buys coins he likes the look of, and attends a lot of shows. You would think people's grading skills would get sharper in time. And clearly I need to be sharper too but there is nothing like seeing hundreds of coins on a daily basis that are fully original.
     
  12. GSDykes

    GSDykes Well-Known Member

    These coins are valuable, but why judge them on monetary value alone, especially the view coming from a TPG? If you like them, then give them a place in your collection. If not, why did you buy? Reminds me of US Mint coin flippers. Trying to buy at a certain price, and then quickly turn around and sell for a big profit. Is that coin collecting? Or is it just a business venture? If you cannot find what you want online, then travel to shows, and view the coin in hand, and talk to the dealer. Otherwise, enjoy your purchases, and quit whinning! :muted: They are very nice coins! Cleaned or not, they are hard to come by.
     
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  13. kaosleeroy108

    kaosleeroy108 The Mahayana Tea Shop & hobby center

    in honesty you should always expect a loss, did you buy them a lcs , so be cautious next time buying from him.. id suggesst you dont buy raw, or tell him to submitt the coins to be graded then reimburse him for the grading fees once they come back.. cause if he's saying there flat 63 or such , technically he can say they are uncirculated ,hes not lieing ,
     
  14. GSDykes

    GSDykes Well-Known Member

    The obverse of the Barber shows on outer ring of tarnish, which should also appear on the outer portion of the reverse. There is none on the reverse, so....the reverse side was cleaned, or the obverse side was laid up and came into contact with a tarnishing substance, and the reverse side did not. But, just from the two photos I would say the Barber SEEMS to have been cleaned. A great coin, but the differences between the two sides raises my eyebrows. I would not have bought this coin in the first place, IF the object was to collect.
     
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  15. kaosleeroy108

    kaosleeroy108 The Mahayana Tea Shop & hobby center

    course not good business but, this is why we learn to grade ourselves..lol
     
    Last edited: Sep 14, 2015
  16. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    I would contact the coin grading service you used and inquire as to why it was graded improperly cleaned. You would learn from this and take that info. back to the dealer. While I'm sure the seller will not guarantee the coin's grade, he should honor the condition of the coin. If he doesn't, move on, learn and find another dealer.
     
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  17. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    If they came back as MS64 or 65, would you have given him extra money?
     
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  18. Owle

    Owle Junior Member

    I don't know any dealer who sells raw coins a grade or two over what they are where it matters; it is almost always the other way. And if collectors are just looking for honesty in pricing and grading then they should find those who they are comfortable with. I recently accepted a return from a collector months after he got it from me simply because he was not happy with it. Nearly full refund except for transaction costs. The hobby gets negatively impacted by dishonesty and those who do not stand behind their merchandise.
     
  19. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    If you want to buy a MS63 coin, buy one already graded. That was his opinion. You must have agreed since you bought it and had it graded. Looks like you were both wrong.
     
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  20. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I understand, but OTOH how would you feel if a collector kept buying things from you raw, and only returned it if the TPG graded it lower than he thought? A LOT of collectors used to do that, basically risk free cherrypicking from honest dealers. I do not blame dealers reacting to that and saying no returns anymore.
     
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  21. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

    That has happened to me before, and I say in my auctions "no guarantees, other than genuine!".
     
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  22. jwitten

    jwitten Well-Known Member

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