Early anacs V nickel

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by kazuma78, Oct 10, 2016.

  1. kazuma78

    kazuma78 Supporter! Supporter

    Picked this up in a local antique store a couple years ago for 30 bucks. I hadn't seen one in a capital holder like this. Thought it was really cool, and probably a bit under graded. The pitting around some of the letters and stars is pretty interesting.
    20161009_083845.jpg 20161009_083921.jpg 20161010_194823.jpg 20161010_194835.jpg 20161010_194858.jpg
     
    charlietig, paddyman98, ddddd and 2 others like this.
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  3. Seattlite86

    Seattlite86 Outspoken Member

    Nice pickup; I've never seen it, thanks for sharing.
     
  4. ddddd

    ddddd Member

  5. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    I say a tad bit under grade, nice slab
     
    Paul M. likes this.
  6. kazuma78

    kazuma78 Supporter! Supporter

    Anyone have an idea what the pitting around the date, under the chin and around some of the stars might be from?
     
  7. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    Cool holder and nice coin. Love the way the grade was broken down on those!
     
  8. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    If you gently hit the side of the holder you can maybe make the V Nickel rotate back into the correct position.
     
  9. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

    Thanks for posting that info on the ANACS Photo Cert's. I've started to keep an eye out for them. It's nice to get the info regarding them. :)
     
    ddddd likes this.
  10. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    You're welcome! The one you should really thank though is @Robert Paul who wrote it!
     
  11. Cascade

    Cascade CAC Grader, Founding Member

  12. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    I have several of those holders. They were made, after market by Capitol Plastics. They still use the little plastic screws to this day.

    There are also similar ones with metal screws (probably made by somebody else) and I even have one that is riveted closed.

    There is nothing that is new and novel (it's 3 sheets of plastic with six drilled/tapped screw holes), the most you could have gotten was a design patent as the original concept was patented in 1960 and had expired (https://patents.google.com/patent/US2998126A/en)
     
  13. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    Also interesting how 3 of 4 graded it 60/60 and 1 graded it 63/60 - also the surface was below average.

    Even in those days, an MS60 with below average surface was Canine.
     
  14. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    Can you get a better shot of the date? :)
     
  15. kazuma78

    kazuma78 Supporter! Supporter

    This is the best I could do with my cell and loupe
    20161011_215748.jpg
     
  16. Evan8

    Evan8 A Little Off Center

    I have one of these. Its a walker though. Same cert and holder. The holder was made by capital plastics i believe, specially for this photo cert. I like how they say who it is registered with also. Here is mine:

    2016-08-22-20-42-47.jpg
    If you google old anacs photo certs there is quite a bit of info on them that can tell you about when it was graded.
     
    Paddy54 likes this.
  17. kazuma78

    kazuma78 Supporter! Supporter

    See the pitting around the date, stars and under the chin? Think its from rusted dies?
    20161011_220207.jpg
     
  18. kazuma78

    kazuma78 Supporter! Supporter

  19. lordmarcovan

    lordmarcovan 48-year collector Moderator

    Great old ANACS photocertificate slab!
     
  20. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    The pitting was common, the mint was still not accustomed to working with the nickel, a very hard metal.

    also, this looks like the die may have just rusted.
     
  21. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    Rust pitting on a die produces positive results on a coin's surface, since it's a negative on the die. Do these features rise above the surface, or are they inset?
     
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