Mexico (Spanish Colonial): 1736-Mo-MF silver 8 reales ("Pillar Dollar"), Mexico City mint NGC XF40. Cert. #6268062-005. Numista-15066, Krause-Mishler-103. .917 silver/.798 oz. Diameter: 40 mm. Weight: 27.07 g. Ex-Ira and Larry Goldberg Auctioneers Auction 126, Lot 1214, 15 Feb 2022. Purchased raw. The Spanish Milled Dollar of eight reales, also colloquially called the "Pillar Dollar" or "Piece of Eight", was a mainstay of world trade in the era of the European colonization of the Americas. As such, it is one of the first coins listed in the "Red Book" of United States Coins, though as a colonial issue it predates the founding of the United States. The American Founding Fathers based the new US dollar on these coins. Needless to say, they are extremely popular with collectors. I liked this example for its contrasting grey toning. I previously had a slightly higher-grade example (1761 PCGS AU50), but sold that coin. I like this earlier-dated piece just as much if not more, despite the 10-point downgrade. 063000
That was pretty much my same thought on the matter. The AU50 I used to own was nice, but I actually like this XF40 a little more. Eye appeal counts more than technical grade in my opinion.
This is true. There are many AU 58s that are much nicer than many MS 61 or 62s and they cost less and look nicer.
That is definitely true! I would also lean towards this one above the one you sold. And the "Pillar Dollar" is one of those coins that I believe finds an ideal spot in almost any box of 20+ collection (and yes I have one in mine ).