I’ve had better luck with cracking out than with crossing, although if the coin is an expensive one, I would probably try crossing.
They will have a photo team, with Justin being the head man. From what he has said the imaging with be through the slab, not raw, for the safety...
I’m not seeing the 1. I thought it would be more visible. I was thinking of the 1941/2. I see the 1941/2-D is a different animal. Nice.
DDO? There looks to be some doubling in there.
Love those large chocolate beauties. Yours is a looker!!
1945-S micro S [ATTACH]
[IMG]
[ATTACH]
Grove Minting has a very realistic obverse but paired with a custom reverse. [IMG]
67FB
I’m almost positive that’s the same Roger. i’m glad you wondered……..it made me do a little investigating.
I just found this post from a 5 year old thread on the PCGS forum. It’s a photo from the Denver mint on die usage for the 1914 Lincoln. It shows 6...
Great question. I only know from what I’ve read. All have said 5 or 6. Here is a link from a CT thread, started in 2009 and updated with map...
I found these on coincommunity.com. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
I read there were 6 obverse dies and 7 reverse dies. I’ve had this pic of the group of 5 for awhile. I thought I had a pic of the 6 but can’t...
Is there anyway to back up all your important stuff, initialize your drive and reinstall Windows 10?
What is the tell on the counterfeit slab? The barcode does scan with the PCGS app.
Separate names with a comma.