Damaged coins are definitely not my cup of tea, but if you are in the area you should absolutely include both Mt. Rushmore and the nearby Crazy...
Unless you have made special arrangements with bank management to violate federal law and risk the bank's license to do business, assume that the...
Very true about the US Coins forum, which I haven't visited in quite a few years except for occasional glimpses. Possibly true about some of the...
Cash coins typically were undated. The bottom one is definitely Chinese - Manchu script on the reverse (lower picture). One of our experts on...
There's a good chance that it was a legitimate bill, with a pasted on picture of Cruise.
Or, you could send it to SGS and request an MS71.
Sure do. Just read the previous posts in this ancient thread.
The catalog prices range from 10% or less to 1000% or more of recent sale value. Realized auction prices are the only true measure of value...
Specifically it's a non-coin pendant celebrating Victoria's 50-year Jubilee.
One post per subject is all you need. Someone has posted a response in your other thread.
I'm not a big TPG fan, and when I do pick up a slabbed coin I generally break it out. That said, I wouldn't dream of buying something like the...
The coin is KM#601, with a bust of Mad King George. The thistle is a Scottish symbol, but I haven't found any historical event associated with...
As stated on the label, you have a moderately high-grade $20 gold piece, graded by one of the two top third party grading companies. I'm neither...
A completely different thing. You have a grease-filled die coin, where a design element (in your case the "9" of the date) isn't fully struck,...
Here's the seller's reply to an inquiry: I'm not clear how taping the serial number in the picture and then listing it in the description protects...
Age has no bearing on genuineness. Counterfeit coins have been produced for more than a millennium! That said, your coin may very well be a...
The damage has nothing to do with whether it's real or fake, but a picture would be helpful in confirming it's status. Even without seeing it,...
All Curacao coins minted in both Philadelphia and Denver were either bronze or silver, so they would not have been magnetic.
Or, perhaps, to conceal the fact that it has been reported as stolen?
Republic of China (Taiwan) Year 44 (1955), bus of Sun Yat Sen. Either a picture of the reverse, or at least a physical description of the coin,...
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