Read my post! There is 1.07 times as much pure silver in a silver dollar than there is in 10 dimes, 4 quarters or 2 halves. When I went to...
$10.70. US silver coins were all .900 fine, and except for the dollar coin, a dollar's worth contained .7234 oz. of pure silver. The dollar...
Not the first time, and assuredly not the last time, that I have a disagreement with Wikipedia and its inexpert editors! Proper translation of...
But you can tell them the truth - the odds are very high that it isn't worth much of a premium over melt - instead of giving them false hopes that...
A little research on a heraldry site might turn up the origin of the crest, and identify it as a button from some type of uniform.
Read it as 4 x 10 + 4. During his lifetime, He was known by that name to the Japanese also. "Showa" was the name assigned to his regnal era....
Those with English language legends and no country name are from Great Britain. Any with legends in non-English characters will have the country...
It also means Yuan - the denomination.
Oh yeah - the one with a URL but no posted picture, is Greek.
The one not shown in your other post is a bronze Japanese ¥10, but the blurry picture doesn't show the date clearly enough to read it. The...
Top - Thailand Bottom - Taiwan, Chinese Republic Year 65 (1976) I don't have access to my catalogs right now, so that"s all I can say off the...
Hey, at least he grades accurately:
Sorry, I didn't see that post. I'm out of here.
As a matter of fact, I subscribe to a plethora of investment newsletters, and spend a significant part of my time dealing with my investment...
"Exit strategy" is an investment term, not a numismatic (or other collecting) term. This thread belongs in the Bullion forum where the coin...
Pictures would help. For what you're asking, even a detailed description would be inadequate.
Much bigger than it was in the 1960's and smaller than it will be when I die. I know the OP isn't asking for an improper purpose, but these...
Posting the same inquiry once in one sub-forum is sufficient. I have identified your list of coins here.
Privately issued, non-coin medallion.
They are if the word "CANADA" appears on the obverse. Based solely on the color of the coins, some are either cu-ni, silver, or some other...
Separate names with a comma.