does any one no if there are going to be any other lincolns worth more this year then the norms 1909s vdb 1914d 1922 no d well you no what i mean.
Some of the CDN values have actually gone down last I checked. I actually expect prices to drop with the recession. Plenty of collectors are selling so they can eat, that increases supply and thus decreases price.
i no what you mean about selling coins i just sold my 1889cc morgan 4 500.00 sad sad sad oh well i will never own one at that price. thanks
It would seem that they have hit their peak for awhile. My guess is the newer collectors from the new mint releases will collect the post Wheaties for a bit and then finally a few will dive in to the more expensive ones over the next few years. i.e. not enough to keep prices up for now.
thats good i guess i just have so many 1909vdb and on up to present my 50s on up are ms but anything before that are not so great thanks for info really like this forum for all of your expertise.forgot dont have any key dates only 1909vdb and 1909 lot of 1943 can you tell me how to store them because they are starting to rust 1943s.
There are a bunch of intercept shield product that should help with this available at most online coin supply stores. The otherway is to get a vegetable sealer, put your coins in the bag and suck the air out. This will keep them moisture free and make it difficult for additional rust to form.
Overrated and unproven. Show me independent test results that their products perform as advertised and I might take them seriously. Until then intercept shield is a waste of money.
I have read (but can not confirm) that prices for the very upper level of the rarities (MS, etc.) are doing fine, but lower grades have been taking a beating lately. Please note: I don't really know the market, I'm just repeating what I read in a coin magazine . . .
The article merely states that it "significantly outperformed non-intercept shield albums", not that it works exactly as advertised. This is not to say that it doesn't, but it doesn't say that they guarantee that it does what they say it does. They merely state that it is better than similar items. I am just naturally a skeptic, tho. I am still in favor of a completely inert material like plastic.
OK guys tell ya what - do your own reading and then decide. You can start here on this serch results page - Click Here What you will find is that the anti-corrosion technolgy developed by Lucent is so successful that there are few industries today which do not use it. It is used on everything from the food processing industry, jewelry industry, aircraft industry, software industry, semiconductor industry, electrical industry - the list goes on and on. And in every case, the same material used to protect your coins is used to protect all of that stuff and more. Now do you think everybody in the world in all these various industries would be using it if it didn't work ? One last thing from personal experience - my son has in his coin collection first year Sackys housed in Intercept Shield slabs. Now Sackys are the most corrosion and tone prevalent coins (because of their compostion) that I have ever seen in my 49 years of collecting. I bought those coins in early 2000. And ya know what - they still look just like they the day I bought them - spotless and tone free after 9 1/2 years. Don't know what else I can tell ya - the stuff works !!
just for the heck of it i took a poor mans 1955 dd and was offered 3 cents ill hold on to my coins 4 ever god willing.