Now he's in a pickle.
Die wear. The continued use has caused the die to expand, and the design ripples away from the center.
Bait and switch. Playing on people's greed. Look up the dollar rolls showing the obverse of an 1889 Morgan on one end, and. BU CC dollar on the...
I was thinking more of the counterfeit goods they ship.
The Chinese are staying busy. I still don't understand why they call them coins.
Only the contents of the package from China would make me nervous.
Not a proof, and never was. Great marketing though to maximize profits.
Not a "knock down", just an observation. Getting green beans on them isn't going to make them more valuable. If they were in rare slabs, like...
So, the work of George Morgan.
Is it necessary. These are not rare or ultra-valuable coins.
AU55 FH. I have an ANACS AU58FH that makes this look EF.
Looks legit, just tarnished and mishandled. Not worth buying for more than melt including shipping.
Something special about big gold coins. Especially to be nearly 400 years old and survive in that kind of shape. A rare treat indeed. I don't...
Always look at the ends of letters - you should see doubling at the points. There are lots of doubled dies in the Morgan Dollar series -...
It also looks like a collapsed die. It gave its last measure of usefulness. Good find.
Looks like they may have spent time in a casino.
I don't buy a car or truck based on what I think the resale value will be. Same with coins.
Not any. Struck on slow medal presses, so coins aren't popped out of the collar like business strikes.
Look like gouges to me on a cleaned AU Morgan Dollar.
Oy vey!
Separate names with a comma.