Depends. If you opened the 2x2, there is the possibility that it may have been damaged. If it has been removed, then a re-stocking fee is...
This works well in Vegas, when a dealer loses big at the craps tables the night before. You can spot them easily - guy hasn't slept all night and...
Have fun by bidding him up. If a few people do it, he'll think that it must be something good. Then laugh when he pays twice what it's worth.
Because not a lot were sold, and some people harvested the coins out of them for their sets.
If it had luster, then you would know it was missing the clad layer. Like this, it matches environmental damage.
Errors are unique, but this isn't an error. It will just be a matter of time until others are discovered. Since these didn't circulate, they will...
More attractive than this one...
Obviously not something I saw or wanted to, because it would have been memorable.
I thought you meant if I liked looking at coins while standing on my head. I don't like either. So, in slabs, why don't they reverse the label then?
Looks like a Mint employee was talking over the coins. It's called bad quality control.
I would be in the $40 range, which is high for a die clash. I like that it is still in the mint cello. I'm not as interested if it was slabbed.
Buy when silver is at $17.50/oz., sell them at spot when it reaches $30. You made money.
All I can say is, ????????
Looks VF35 to XF40 to me.
Thanks. I told him I thought it was a token like the Blacksmith tokens in Canada.
I understand. I will keep checking Mint Sets. Good observation.
When I was a kid in the late 60s and early 70s I had rolls and rolls of Jefferson nickels minus the 39-D and 50-D. Dealers didn't want them, so...
This is called fishing. Go to Sold ebay listings to see what they really sell for. Less than 1/10 what he is asking. Grading and attribution fees...
But that's how they pronounce it in Boston, but without the last R.
Yes.
Separate names with a comma.