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You do realize thatyou would be physically altering the coinin an easily detectable mannerthat would reduce its numismatic valuedon't you?
Only one thing about gold prices can be confidently guaranteed - They will sometimes go up, sometimes go down, and sometimes remain stable!
Sometimes. That depends on a number of factors, including exactly how low the number is, what denomination the note is, the condition of the note,...
Agreed. (And I am in my right mind!
Correct. No, it's 740 - meaning 5740. Krause gives the date of KM#100 as 1980, but Hebrew Year 5740 actually extended from September 22, 1979...
Sounds like a bit of bullion silver, not a coin. It would be worth the spot price of silver +/- a little bit depending on whether you were buying...
All I remember is that it had mechanical brakes (hydraulics came the next year), and an engine that used more oil than OPEC could produce in a day!
From the 21st Century Krause, 2d Ed., p. 188: So in your case the missing first digit is perfectly normal.
1. Walking Liberty halfs from circulation 2. '34 Chevy 3. ~65 years
Makes sense. Even though I couldn't see the dates on the crappy Krause picture, I knew they had to be there as Krause doesn't give a date unless...
KM#6, is listed with intermittent dates from 1957-1970 in both circulation and proof versions. It's listed as 4.5g of cu-ni and the flower in a...
BTW Prince Shotoku is an interesting personality, born in either 673 or 674 depending upon which authority you refer to, and subsequently Imperial...
You have a very nice example of a ¥100 military note of what the Japanese refer to as "the China Japanese Incident", and the rest of the world...
If getting caught causes a scammer to suffer, so be it!
Post-mint damage, possibly some type of encasement.
Because of the rule that only selected TPGs can be mentioned in EBay listings? Like most of their so-called anti-fraud measures, it accomplishes...
According to Krause KM#25 is a cu-ni, mintage 70,000; and KM#25a is a 15,000-mintage proof of the same design in Sterling silver - 28.28g, .8411...
73,320,000 minted in Taisho 11 - third highest mintage of the series, which ran from Meiji 39 (1906) through Showa 13 (1938). 58,675,000 minted...
Aha! Being able to read only the numbers does become a handicap at times.
Separate names with a comma.