I wouldn't call the 1832 "most common". That would be the 1809 with a mintage over 1 million.
Images courtesy of Robec. [IMG]
...and detcto is spelled Detecto:devil:
I pronounced it with a NY accent.
It all depends on what's in the soil. Here are two dimes I found in 2010, and I didn't touch them with anything. [IMG]
Here are some silver coins I found detecting, they have a whitish tone to them. [IMG]
The 1/10 oz AGE is a very small coin. It's even smaller than a dime. For the money I would suggest looking into a nice seated or capped bust half...
I know the coin has hairlines. Not selling this to anyone. This coin was found by my father with a metal detector about 8 years ago. When it came...
I could tell it was a proof from 38 feet away. Congrats on the correct label from PCGS!
Congrats to witty38! He is the winna!
IMO the half cent is really a sleeper. Besides the 1809, all of the classic head series have mintages under 1 million. The 1832 has a mintage of...
For the 2011 everyone has 100,000 with a star after it, like they don't know for sure. BTW, as far as modern silver goes (including commens)...
Does anyone have the mintage numbers for the 2011 and 2012 Reverse Proof ASE?
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I don't get why sellers have the option of stating returns/ no returns, because people can use Buyer Protection on sales that say no returns.
Approval sale?
This is the kind of stuff I'm talking about. If your selling a coin for $1200, can't you afford a $99 camera to take better pictures? According...
I noticed a lot of coins on tonight's TT auction had high starting bids. $700 is too high, $400-$500 is plenty.
I looked at this site. They want $24.00 to ship ONE silver eagle.
I have the bid on this. I can say without doubt it's slab-positive. [IMG] [IMG]
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