Details Coins That Are Slabbed

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Coin Aficionado, Mar 21, 2026 at 10:56 PM.

  1. yarm

    yarm Junior Member Supporter

    A 17th century cast medal deemed unc but details "tooled". Given the common practice of casting and chasing medals of that era, it leaves me wondering how tooling and chasing are distinguished.

    NGC2920049-001_OBV.jpg NGC2920049-001_REV.jpg NGC2920049-001_REV.jpg
     
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  3. Histman

    Histman Too Many Coins, Not Enough Time!

    Perfect timing for this topic. I submitted three coins to PCGS at the end of January and just got them back. One was a 1973 Canadian Large Bust quarter. I sent it in for authenticity purposes. It came back as "Genuine AU - Scratched." The scratch you can't even see unless you have it in hand and turn the angle, so it doesn't bother me at all. The second coin was a 1916-D Mercury Dime. Again, I sent it in for authentication. It came back as "Genuine AG - Ungradable." For me, it was authenticated, and that is all I care about. I have bought several other coins in "Details" condition -- 1928-P Peace Dollar, for example. I look at that coin and can't even see what the detail issue is. I don't buy these coins with the intent of reselling them, so as long as they look good to the eye, I buy them if they are key dates. I can now say I have an authentic 1916-D Mercury Dime instead of guessing if it was. P.S. The last coin I am waiting on is the 1895-O Barber Dime. I sent it off for the same reason: to authenticate it.
     
  4. Joshua Lemons

    Joshua Lemons Well-Known Member Supporter

    I don't buy details coins in slabs, though I have submitted some that came back with that designation. I sold them all. I will say they are quite good learning tools and my details grades for submissions has dropped because of this.
     
  5. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    A selection of top shelf coins with detail labels….. Whole point being that there are attractive pieces out there with less than perfect labels. If you like the coin, buy the coin. If you are in this for profit then don’t buy them……. And I have no earthly idea why this thing flipped my photos sideways. My apologies…

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  6. mrweaseluv

    mrweaseluv Supporter! Supporter

    Mostly, I try to avoid "details" coins... though I'm not very good at it lol... Often I will accept a high grade (AU-UNC) Though this is usualy reserved for high value coins I could not otherwise own. I do however insist on good eyeappeal on any details coins I add to my sets... 3 good examples....
    1895_o_morgan_silver_dollar_1_ngc_vg_details_back-min.jpg 1895_o_morgan_silver_dollar_1_ngc_vg_details_front-min.jpg 4882594_Full_Obv.jpg 4882594_Full_Rev.jpg 4317394_Full_Obv.jpg 4317394_Full_Rev.jpg
     
  7. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    The first two deserved to be flipped for better viewing. :D
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  8. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    I have three details coins that I bought. One I cracked for an album with a missed RPM It was a 63D Franky PCGS questionable color UNC details.
    The second is in a Blue label Soapbox slab, also is a variety so a plus for me. Third is a cleaned Washington Quarter missing clad layer reverse. AU55 details, it was so affordable that I couldn't pass it up.
     
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  9. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

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  10. mrweaseluv

    mrweaseluv Supporter! Supporter

    yeah lol was the original pic from the seller (apmex), somehow I've not updated the slab pic lol
     
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  11. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    They did a better job matching the typeface than most of the folks making fake slabs!
     
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