65. Better if not for the abrasion on the chin.
My first glance indicates it's a 1923.
$200. The toning doesn't take it out of the MS60-62 range, at best.
It's not particularly relevant, but I just got a silver dime out of the reject slot of a CoinStar at Walmart. I'm not going to have it graded!
My best find at a sale of that sort was an AU 1895-O Barber quarter for $1!
It's a nice 1882-S, but most of them are nice. I also think you're being optimistic with the grading if you think it's better than 64 or 65.
It's not worth having graded or putting in your collection. Sell it and spend the money on a decent (uncleaned) coin is my advice.
1927-S SL 25c are nice to own, but lower grades are not at all rare. This is a classic example of a condition rarity, relatively plentiful in...
To the original poster, spend it.
After all the speculation on here about the "2" and the mintmark, my advice would be to submit it to a certification service. If it's genuine, it...
They probably graded VG-F before they were polished within an inch of their lives. Don't know when I've seen a more buffed-up Buffalo nickel.
64 and 65, respectively.
Doesn't anyone on here use SilverTowne? I've sold them lots of stuff over the years and have also bought things from them at shows. Some locals I...
Try a prescription for nortriptyline. Before Prozac, the top selling antidepressant was Pamelor; nortriptyline is the generic version of that. It...
I like the bottom one better, however.
The top one is a F12, the bottom VG8, IMO.
62
I've fooled with coins in one way or another since I was in junior high back in the early 1950s. Although I've never tried specifically to invest...
If you're not an expert, as you say, stick to coins certified by the experts at either ANACS, NGC, or PCGS.
The word is "nickel," not nickle.
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