WOW! How to sway people - berate a com[any without any facts. I am sure all the learned people will follow your rant with total disinterest.
If you are so damn right, show him some proof! Else wise, I just wish the both of you would hang it up.
Hudson Bay.
IMO, lighting is more important than the camera.
I am pretty sure that is a large date, but that link will show you how to tell.
Try some acetone on that one. Those spots might just go away, but no guarantees.
After seeing your photos, I would guess that one has a good shot at being slabbed as a no"D". But those are funky. I have one that photo's with...
Sorry, but that is just old and worn.
I am pretty sure that is not die #2. That "D" got weak (I rather doubt is is a true weak "D") because the MM became grease filled. Die #2 had a...
I do not know what constitutes a "faint D" That is a regular D VF20/25. Here is what a weak "D" looks like; [ATTACH]
It is not the blobs of color like mine, but the colors are about the same.
1. 40 2. 53 3. 50 4. 45 5. 58 6. 40 7. au details
Flaking? You would break the bubble and you could see a crack or hole in the plating.
I have never seen one tone like this or even similar. Any ideas how or why? [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Sure looks like a plating problem to me.
Obviously, the experts (DOJ et al) disagree with them being considered counterfeits. I have no idea how eBay has migrated their regulations now...
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Probably not a drier cent, but still PMD.
And just what coin (i.e. legal coin) is a 1964 peace dollar a replica of? A 1910-D Indian cent? A 1933 Washington quarter?
I cannot tell for sure from that picture, but it looks like a drier cent to me.
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