These wrong planchet freaks are among my favorite errors. I was waiting for a double error and a high MS grade, and boy, patience paid off. A wrong planchet AND struck on a blank (no rim) with a fully readable date. A real beauty, and probably one of my last posts until October (though I have a nice silver wheatie coming). Enjoy it!
Not working now til september. I also notice green pvc everywhere on this. Gonna have to return it and might just delete this post
But you will still be on CoinTalk right? Checking out other threads. You're not the only person showing their Mint Errors here!
The dealer graciously acknowledged and refunded. He is going to have it removed by PCGS through their restoration service, and promised me first crack at it. Does PVC come back once removed?
Not usually. The risk is that a chemical reaction has damaged the actual coin surface beneath, which usually takes a while. I once bought a 1924 Standing Lib quarter that had more green slime on it than any coin I had ever seen. The auctioneer had it listed "VF net". An acetone bath took it all off and it straight graded an MS64
Actually, the seller will NOT acknowledge PVC but is still refunding me. Now sure how you can make a case that it isn't PVC. He posted for $1,200. Got him to $800. Now he says he is putting it on eBay for $2,200. But buying it with PVC is too much of a risk for $800. I won't buy something, especially slabbed, if it has it. I don't know enough about pvc removal, and once I remove it from the slab I am stuck with it if the problem cannot be solved. Better to be safe than sorry for $800. Too bad. Not likely gonna fimd another like it on a blank at that grade with a full date for under $1,000. Oh well
If I were you, I would have sent it back to NGC to have it conserved by NCS. I would think they should have done that before putting it into one of their regular slabs.
What everyone needs to appreciate is that what @JCro57 is putting together is not some run-of-the-mill error collection. He's putting together what is called an "important" collection, the kind of thing that gets its own Heritage or S/B glossy catalog someday. We all are getting in on the beginning of a superior collection. He needs to walk away from pieces that don't meet his standards. It's what owners of important collections do.
PVC removal is not difficult, and there's no problem with the resulting coin if the PVC hasn't actually damaged the coin's surface. As I said above, I would have sent it to NGC to get NCS conservation and then grading and slabbing. If you get it into an NGC slab with no problems mentioned, then it would fit into an "important" collection.
Yes, in hindsight, either crack it yourself and try acetone or send it in for conservation. Now, you won't be getting it back.
You and I both know that this is not near the level of PVC residue that one should really be concerned about treating. Even already slabbed, it's just a minor inconvenience with the only risk being the regrade. Standards apply for selecting the right coins, and this is the right coin. You don't walk away from a unique piece because of a trivial amount of PVC residue.
If it were mine, I would crack it, acetone it, and resubmit it to NGC. But @JCro57 might be a PCGS fan. I don’t know PCGS’ policy on pieces like this one.
No remorse here. I have several other pieces much more unique. And I would much rather have a Franklin on Quarter planchet, but i gotta save up a little bit longer. There are lots of Kennedys on quarter planchets