Coin Star machines were not designed with the numismatist in mind, but rather the everyday Joe with a jug or two of change who doesn't wish to...
Two distracting marks on obverse, one on the chin, and the other along the jaw line into the hair, above the eye, lots of bag marks and...
He's from Lockport, N.Y; whatchya expect?
Sounds like a plating job. Washington quarters are made of copper and nickle. Save for it being an uncirculated and grading higher than 64,...
Worth a nickle.
Don't forget the 65-70 proof sets have the 40% halves.
Welcome Ricardo. I think you would do better on price from a local dealer on the silver proof sets from past years. Most of these I see on eBay...
+1 rick They're more common than Congress agreeing together.
Silver melt only.
Wow!
302,097,424 making it most common, worth face, and heavily circulated as well. Jloring, if that seller can't tell that is PMD and not worth...
I think if you re-read Doug's post, he was not stating you can find those for sale below spot, but that's what the offer will be, and he was...
Welcome to CT. We really don't need more than one thread on the same coin. Someone who knows about Asian coins can help you.
I think it makes perfect sense to me in that the TPGS have different grading standards from one another and what might be one thing to one TPG is...
What makes you think any of those are AT? They all look natural to me, especially the 1819/8 CBH. The toning is in the crease of the raised...
Don't clean it anymore as what you have done to it already is more than you should have.
The black parts from what I'm seeing is looks like dirt splotches, and some toning, or Tarnish, which happens to silver when hydrogen sulfide, one...
Your 51-S Franklin is worth melt, or $11.77 at the close of the market today, and is second most common from 51 with San Francisco striking...
No I wouldn't.
PCGS values this one at $98. I wouldn't be upset paying $125 because I love the tone pattern on the obverse.
Separate names with a comma.