Soon Free...

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Ken Dorney, Nov 30, 2016.

  1. Ed Snible

    Ed Snible Well-Known Member

    The NGC tag will be important in the future.

    NGC has photographed the coin, and with the tag you get the photograph https://www.ngccoin.com/certlookup/4251253-001/ which may not be important to the advanced collector but some people will appreciate.

    If Roman coins ever come under some kind of heritage law where provenance becomes necessary to sell the coin, as recently happened in Germany, NGC has records of when the coin was encapsulated. Encapsulation date isn't currently available on NGC's "verify" web page, but it could be added, and then the ID will be a nice proof that the coin was on the market in 2016.
     
    JBGood and Mikey Zee like this.
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  3. Cucumbor

    Cucumbor Well-Known Member

    Much better like this : actual coin vs. plastic !!!

    Q
     
  4. Jimski

    Jimski Well-Known Member

    You don't need that chisel. Just stand the slab, on its short edge, on a concrete floor. Tap the opposite short edge around a corner with a heavy hammer. I use a short handle sledge with just a little force. It cracks the slabs at the seams. Start with a small force and increase slightly until it cracks open. Then just spread the slab apart. They will open like a book. If not, repeat the procedure on the other corner. It's a non-scary procedure. Attached are some results.
    PC091107.JPG PC091109.JPG PC091109.JPG PC091112.JPG
     
    TIF and Alegandron like this.
  5. Orfew

    Orfew Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus

    I have used the hammer method myself. It is very easy.
     
  6. stevex6

    stevex6 Random Mayhem

    Atta-boy, Ken ... that's 100% sound thinkin'

    => I'm sure it'd free you if the roles were reversed

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Dec 10, 2016
    Alegandron likes this.
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