The various $1 circulation-strike coins of the last 40 years; they are not destined to be with us much longer, in my opinion.
Yes, coin cabinets until the 1930s (?). Even so, the tiny hints of wear caused by picking them up and putting them back into the trays led to a...
CIA Internal Memo #3877692845924: The dime trick worked! We now have peachesgirl's fingerprints!! Too bad Osama wasn't a stacker :(.
I haven't seen a red seal in circulation for at least 20 years. Do banks automatically pull them for destruction?
Maybe the bank. They hate them, and customers don't want them, so they pile up and drive the cash manager crazy.
As I said previously...............coin shows, where there's significant competition between dealers on bullion items, and occasionally a dealer...
Yes, cheap, but a painful, frustrating way to make money, with every potential buyer whinging about the price due to the condition, trying to beat...
Note (duplicate)
The ones that sold for $90 + $10 were sterling silver, i.e., glorified "rounds". from listing: Questions and answers about this item Q: Are the...
I saw a set of the 5 "dollars" at a coin show; you had to wear sunglasses to look at them. And that was indoors.
Stick to coin shows, where the original buyers have already taken their lumps, and the dealers who bought this dreck can consistently undercut...
Here's this week's quota of (Chinese) fake half cents, large cents, and Indians. I don't think they bother to counterfeit Poor's and Fair's....
Here is a link to all the fees on eBay: http://pages.ebay.com/help/sell/fees.html "Buy It Now" doesn't change the fees. Selling cars, real...
No change, as far as I can tell, for a 5-day or 7-day auction. A lower insertion fee if you previously used 10-day auctions; a higher fee if you...
duplicate
Some 40 years previously, in the 1770s, there had been a similar shortage of minor coins, followed by a huge proliferation of counterfeit coppers....
Looks fine to me. The insertion credit is a great deal. Donohue must have cleaned out his desk and departed, he would never have approved these...
The devil's in the details. A $5 Washington contains 0.2418 Troy ounces. Shifting to the 1-ounce standard, it takes 4.14 coins to equal one...
Separate names with a comma.