1652 pine tree shilling

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by Johnace87, Oct 23, 2015.

  1. Johnace87

    Johnace87 New Member

    Can anyone give me input on this coin? Does it appear to be genuine from these photos? 20151012_050219-1-800x790.jpg 20151021_230635-1-1024x1067.jpg 20151020_151808-1024x1821.jpg
     
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  3. tommyc03

    tommyc03 Senior Member

    I'm not trolling but I'm not up on these. Does anyone think those are casting bubbles in the first photo at the bottom?
     
  4. Johnace87

    Johnace87 New Member

    Those are called rosettes there is 7 on one side and 8 on the other
     
  5. l.cutler

    l.cutler Member

    No, it appears to be a cast replica. It does appear to have casting bubbles and is much too thick to be a real one. The weight should be around 72 grains, I suspect if you weigh it, it will be much more.
     
  6. Johnace87

    Johnace87 New Member

    I'm having trouble seeing the casting bubbles can you direct me to were they are so I can see them? 14456355116841548264701.jpg
     
  7. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    Those pits on the sides.
     
  8. KurtS

    KurtS Die variety collector

    To my eyes, the surfaces look granular, as if cast. None of the design shows sharp definition you would expect to see on a struck coin, even when heavily worn. It's probably safest to assume a heavily-copied coin is just that, until proven otherwise?
     
    jester3681 and tommyc03 like this.
  9. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    From your photos, no. It appears to be a cast coin. Check it out more thoroughly.
     
  10. physics-fan3.14

    physics-fan3.14 You got any more of them.... prooflikes?

    Definitely a fake. The fakes outnumber the genuine examples 100:1 on these, if not more.
     
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