Doug has also eaten Tide Pods with no ill effects, so go figure!!! Really, Doug??? Tide Pods??? It's a stupid phenomenon!!! You shouldn't do this!
I used it and also loved it. Forgot about it. Maybe I might buy another copy.
but to answer your question directly, no not all of them would have a rim ding, that would have happened after the coin left the Mint.
That doesn't look as much like a rim ding to me as a lamination or some small imperfection.
as I said... the value went up when the label went oops!
nah, I've seen hundreds of these. They're just polished to the point of making the value fall to face
I don't know if it's worth that much
pictures are needed in order to help you with your request. Please post pictures of the coins both individually and as a group.
PF-67
1917 Standing Liberty Type II
buy them raw. They will sell at roughly melt value whether slabbed or not IMHO
I recommend using powder-free latex gloves.
give credit where due, Kurt. anything with a mintage of over 200,000 is NOT rare
but that would be Kurt's preferences, not a grading system/scale
I would only correct this to say that the Philadelphia Proof Set "token" is made of silver metallic colored paper. The Mint Set tokens of this era...
If you decide to remove them from the card, pure acetone should remove the glue residue
The soap I used was a round disk and it's been so long that I can't recall what kind it was, I'm sorry. I have since joined the Dollar Shave Club...
Only if it is lighter. A 5 Cent planchet wouldn't fit into the press, so the only possibility of wrong planchet is a dime planchet.
I used a mug and brush for a while. It was a novelty in my mind. It is cheaper, but the lubrication from today's gels is better IMHO. As with...
the overdate is not an overdate... sorry to crush your dreams
Separate names with a comma.